- 作者: Nan M. Sussman
- 出版社:HKU Press
- 出版年份:2024
- 語言:English
- ISBN:9789888028849
- 頁數:368
The global trend for immigrants to return home has unique relevance for Hong Kong. This work of cross-cultural psychology explores many personal stories of return migration. The author captures in dozens of interviews the anxieties, anticipations, hardships and flexible world perspectives of migrants and their families as well as friends and co-workers.
Table of Contents
Front Matter
Table of Contents
List of Illustrations
Preface and acknowledgments
About the author
Introduction: “Anna” migrates and returns home
1 A short history of two hundred years of Hong Kong migration and identity
2 Sojourner adjustment and adaptation to new cultures: Art, literature, and the social science perspective on identity
3 Returning home: Cultural transitions and the identity model
4 Results from the Hong Kong Remigration Project: Departing, adjusting, returning
5 Additive identity
6 Subtractive identity
7 Global and affirmative identities
8 Remigrants and family life
9 Remigrants and professional life
10 Confucius and Socrates: Ancient philosophies, migration, and cultural identity
11 The new Hong Kong boomerang
Appendix A Hong Kong Remigration Project questionnaire and psychological scales
Appendix B Methods, sample, and qualitative analysis
Appendix C Quantitative analysis
Appendix D Demographic characteristics of research participants
Notes
References
Index
The book examines cultural identity shifts and population flows during a critical juncture in Hong Kong history between the Sino-British Joint Declaration in 1984 and the early years of Hong Kong’s new status as a special administrative region after 1997. Nearly a million residents of Hong Kong migrated to North America, Europe and Australia in the 1990s. These interviews and analyses help illustrate individual choices and identity profiles during this period of unusual cultural flexibility and behavioral adjustment.
Nan M. Sussman is an associate professor and chair of psychology at the College of Staten Island, City University of New York.
“Sussman effectively weaves together themes about migration and remigration from such diverse sources as arts and literature, history, sociology, and her own discipline of psychology. This book will make an excellent contribution to research on acculturation, cross-cultural transition and adaptation, identity and migration.” —Colleen Ward, Victoria University of Wellington
“This book contributes significantly to the hardly researched topic of the complex cultural identities of return migrants to Hong Kong. An extensive examination of the relevant historical and sociocultural contexts, and a lively review of the relevant literature in cultural psychology and human geography, sets the scene for investigating the many layers and typology of individual differences in cultural identity among the returnees who had earlier emigrated to Australia and Canada prior to the handover of Hong Kong to China in 1997. I especially appreciate the focus on the main finding of returnee satisfaction and an additive cultural identity profile among Hong Kongers, contrasting with remigrants in the West.” —Anita Mak, University of Canberra