Happy Valley heterotopia: representing colonial order in a Hong Kong “other space”
Social Transformations in Chinese Societies
ISSN: 1871-2673
Article publication date: 3 May 2022
Issue publication date: 19 April 2023
Abstract
Purpose
This paper aims to trace the development of Hong Kong's Happy Valley from a space associated with dangerous miasmas to the site of a racecourse, recreation ground and a series of cemeteries for the colony's foreign communities while examining the relationship between the exclusion of Chinese from Happy Valley and the notion of colonial order.
Design/methodology/approach
This paper makes use of empirical evidence from historical documents, such as newspapers and government records, and applies Michel Foucault's notion of the heterotopia as a theoretical model.
Findings
This paper provides insights into the relationship between space and power in the colonial setting. It demonstrates that the imposition of colonial order in Happy Valley was a process that involved the exclusion of Chinese and that the various ways in which this order was reinforced, contested and negotiated revealed it to be shallow and incomplete.
Originality/value
This paper sheds light on an underexamined but important colonial space in 19th and early 20th century Hong Kong and complicates the notion of colonial control.
Keywords
Acknowledgements
This paper has its origins in author’s dissertation for the degree of Master of Letters in Transnational, Global and Spatial History at the University of St Andrews. The author would like to thank Dr Konrad Lawson for his excellent supervision and his valuable feedback at multiple stages of this project.
Citation
Vaughan, L.N. (2023), "Happy Valley heterotopia: representing colonial order in a Hong Kong “other space”", Social Transformations in Chinese Societies, Vol. 19 No. 1, pp. 29-40. https://doi.org/10.1108/STICS-10-2021-0009
Publisher
:Emerald Publishing Limited
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