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Paradigm City

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Materially grounded analysis of contemporary film, literature, and music in Hong Kong that resists the superficial stereotypes of the "global city."Hong Kong is often cast in the role of the paradi...
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  • 01 January 2010
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Materially grounded analysis of contemporary film, literature, and music in Hong Kong that resists the superficial stereotypes of the "global city."

Hong Kong is often cast in the role of the paradigmatic "global city," epitomizing postmodernism and globalization, and representing a vision of a cosmopolitan global and capitalist future. In Paradigm City, Janet Ng takes us past the obsession with 1997-the year of Hong Kong's return to China-to focus on the complex uses and meanings of urban space in Hong Kong in the period following that transfer. She demonstrates how the design and ordering of the city's space and the practices it supports inculcates a particular civic aesthetic among Hong Kong's population that corresponds to capitalist as well as nationalist ideologies. Ng's insightful connections between contemporary film, literature, music, and other media and the actual spaces of the city-such as parks, shopping malls, and domestic spaces-provide a rich and nuanced picture of Hong Kong today.

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Price: £25.50
Pages: 210
Publisher: State University of New York Press
Imprint: SUNY Press
Series: SUNY series in Global Modernity
Publication Date: 01 January 2010
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9780791476666
Format: Paperback
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"…Paradigm City is pleasant reading and conveys quite comprehensively the complex socio-political dynamics of a city that has yet to find a clear identity in the midst of a seemingly never-ending transition." — China Journal

"…covers much in a quite interesting way." — CHOICE

List of Illustrations
Acknowledgments
Introduction

1. "World Suicide Capital"

2. Walking Down Memory Lane: On the Streets of the Hong Kong History Museum’s Paradigm City

3. Quality Citizens in Public Spaces

4. The World Emporium and the Mall City

5. Body Weight, Responsible Citizenship, and Women’s Social Space

6. Homecoming from Cosmopolitanism

Conclusion
Notes
Bibliography
Index