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Cultural Policies and Identity Formation in Taiwan and Hong Kong

Part of the Routledge culture, society, business in East Asia series series
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Although Taiwan and Hong Kong are both Chinese societies previously subjected to colonial rule, the identity formation of the two peoples differs significantly, with Taiwan’s modern consciousness underpinned by nationalism and Chinese-ness whereas Hong Kong’s identity is characterised by the “in-between-ness” between Eastern/traditional/conservative and Western/modern/liberal outlooks and lifestyles.

This book examines how these different identities came about.

It considers the impact of Japanese and British colonial rule, explores the cultural policies implemented both in colonial times and after, and discusses fully the nature of present day identity and consciousness in the two places, including an assessment of how far governments’ cultural policies are embraced and embedded.

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Product Details
Routledge
1138120359 / 9781138120358
Hardback
306
05/01/2026
United Kingdom
English
256 pages
24 cm