反对中港高铁运动中的俯首行走:本土社会运动的集体认同

IF 0.5 Q4 SOCIOLOGY
S. Chan
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引用次数: 8

摘要

在中国对香港恢复主权十年后,占领、封锁和风暴在社会运动中并不罕见。组织者和参与者通常都是本地出生的年轻人。他们中的一些人是十几岁的中学生。他们被称为第四代香港人或80后。本文考察了涉及这些青年活动家的社会运动的文化背景。它主要研究了反对中港高速铁路发展项目的运动。该项目要求拆除蔡园村,这是一个位于其设计路线上的小乡村。从那时起,年轻一代在社会运动中的作用得到了普遍认可。社会媒体广泛应用于运动的各个阶段,公民记者积极参与。模仿西藏朝圣者令人印象深刻的“跪拜行走”成为这些青年活动分子的象征。它还出现在其他运动中,包括2014年香港的“占中”运动。本文认为,本土主义的兴起、资讯及通讯科技的进步,以及新社会运动的转变,都促成了青年在香港近期社会运动中的主导地位。香港人的集体认同是对中国自上而下的同化的回应,加强了这场运动。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Prostrating Walk in the Campaign against Sino-Hong Kong Express Railway: Collective Identity of Native Social Movement
Occupation, blockage and storming are not rare in social movements a decade after China resuming sovereignty in Hong Kong. The organizers and participants usually involve locally born young people. Some of them are secondary school students in their teens. They are known as the fourth generation or post-1980s born Hongkongers. The paper examines the cultural context of social movements involving these youth activists. It mainly studied the campaign against the Sino-Hong Kong Express Railway development project. The project called for the demolition of the Tsoi Yuen Village, a small rural village located on its designed route. Since then, the role of younger generation in social movements has been generally recognized. Social media are widely employed in all stages of the movements with citizen journalists actively involved. The impressive ‘prostrating walk’ imitating Tibetan pilgrims becomes the symbol of these youth activists. It keeps appearing in other campaigns including Occupy Central in Hong Kong in 2014. This paper argues that the rise of nativism, advancement in ICT technology and shifting towards new social movements contribute to the dominant role of youth in recent social movements of Hong Kong. Collective identity of Hongkonger in response to the top-down assimilation by China, strengthens the movement.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.80
自引率
0.00%
发文量
15
审稿时长
9 weeks
期刊介绍: Cosmopolitan Civil Societies: An Interdisciplinary Journal is concerned with developing a better understanding of social change and cultural cohesion in cosmopolitan societies. Its focus lies at the intersection of conflict and cohesion, and in how division can be transformed into dialogue, recognition and inclusion. The Journal takes a grounded approach to cosmopolitanism, linking it to civil society studies. It opens up debate about cosmopolitan engagement in civil societies, addressing a range of sites: social movements and collective action; migration, cultural diversity and responses to racism; the promotion of human rights and social justice; initiatives to strengthen civil societies; the impact of ‘information society’ and the context of environmental change.
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