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Archive 2022 |
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THE HONG KONG ANTHROPOLOGICAL SOCIETY An Anthropological Talk by Cheuk Ka-Kin Money Circulations and
Fabric Exports from China to Dubai through Indian Friday 18 November 2022, 7:00pm Chiefly drawing on ethnographic fieldwork in the district of Keqiao in Zhejiang Province, China, and other related field sites -including India and Hong Kong -since 2009, this talk will show that irregular financial transactions play a significant role in the sustenance of otherwise tenuous business relations between Indian traders and Chinese suppliers in the China-Dubai fabric trade. Much of the fabric exported from Keqiao to Dubai relies on intertwined formal and informal transactions operated by Indian diasporic trading networks. These labyrinthine transnational money transactions aim to circumvent institutional hurdles and overcome deficiencies in operating capital, yet inherent to this system is a cycle of payment lags that cause tense relations between payers and payees. Such money transactions facilitate eventual payment in most cases, most of the time and maintain enough trust to keep the trade network alive. Furthermore, the interlocking circuits of money circulations also prevent the overaccumulation of wealth and power by any particular stakeholder involved in the international trade and defy or at least circumvent the formal political authority of state and financial institutions that seek to curtail such practices. These transactions, thereby, create a larger space for business survival among the grassroots players, especially Indian traders who may not have enough capital available when they initiate a deal with a Chinese supplier. Dr. Ka-Kin Cheuk is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Chinese and History at the City University of THE HONG KONG ANTHROPOLOGICAL SOCIETY An Anthropological Talk by Gordon Mathews Senses of Life After Death Today: The United States, Japan, Mainland China and Hong Kong Friday 28 October 2022, 7:00pm What happens to us after we die? Up until recently, most people in the world, following one of the world's religions, more or less knew the answer to this question. Today, however, senses of life after death have become profoundly individualized as well as secularized. This talk, based on a book to be published in January 2023, explores senses of life after death or its absence in the United States, Japan, Mainland China, and Hong Kong, through ethnographic interviews that Mathews, Yang Yang, and Miu Ying Kwong have conducted with some 500 people in these societies. While in the United States, the Christian God and heaven still serve as a moral guide and shadow for Christians and atheists alike, in Japan, a society full of pressure to live in certain ways, senses of life after death serve as matters of personal hope and moral escape. In Mainland China, senses of life after death have reemerged as materialist ideology has lost meaning for some as a guide by which to live. In Hong Kong, there is a mixture of Christianity, Chinese religious traditions, and secularism in senses of life after death; how will this shift as Hong Kong becomes more Chinese? This talk shows how senses of life after death can serve as a fascinating window into life before death in these different societies. Gordon Mathews is a Research Professor in Anthropology at the Chinese University of Hong Kong. He has long been active in the Hong Kong Anthropological Society, and is incoming Chair of the World Council of Anthropological Associations. |
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