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Toilet as Business for the Hygiene of the Chinese Community in Colonial Hong Kong

Autor Yuk-sik Chong
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 10 apr 2022
This book analyses how public toilets were provided by the government and local business in Hong Kong between the 1860s and 1930s through a process that was embedded in class and racial politics. Addressing public toilet provision from a political economy perspective, it focuses on the interplay of the cross-border night soil business between Hong Kong and China’s silk producing area; the silk market between China and Colonial powers; the Hong Kong land market between the colonial government and Chinese business; and how these factors jointly produced a network of toilets in the colony. As the book shows, the commercial viability of toilets created multiple logics and a new moral geography; further, exploring the topic can help us gain a better understanding of how urban governance functioned in colonies and how it intertwined with economic contingencies within a global economic system. The intended readership includes academics and members of the general public with an interest in colonialism, public infrastructures, public health, government–business relations, and urban governance.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9789811913952
ISBN-10: 9811913951
Pagini: 175
Ilustrații: XVII, 175 p. 22 illus., 21 illus. in color.
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 mm
Greutate: 0.45 kg
Ediția:1st ed. 2022
Editura: Springer Nature Singapore
Colecția Springer
Locul publicării:Singapore, Singapore

Cuprins

Introduction: Capitalism, Morality and the Reordering of Space.- Economic Restructuring and Colonial Collaboration.- Governing Public Health and Colonial Public Toilets.- The Economic Dimension of Governing Public Health: Marketing Public Toilets.- A Blending of Economic and Moral Logics within Public Toilets.- Concluding Remarks: A Particluar Mode of Urban Governance.

Notă biografică

Yuk-sik Chong is Research Associate in the Hong Kong Institute of Asia-Pacific Studies at the Chinese University of Hong Kong. Educated at the University of Hong Kong (Sociology and Heritage Conservation) and the University of Warwick (Race and Ethnics), Chong is the author of On-Street Newspaper Stalls (2010) and The Footsteps of Hong Kong Cotton Spinners (2013), and Professional member of the Hong Kong Institute of Architectural Conservationists.

Textul de pe ultima copertă

This book analyses how public toilets were provided by the government and local business in Hong Kong between the 1860s and 1930s through a process that was embedded in class and racial politics. Addressing public toilet provision from a political economy perspective, it focuses on the interplay of the cross-border night soil business between Hong Kong and China’s silk producing area; the silk market between China and Colonial powers; the Hong Kong land market between the colonial government and Chinese business; and how these factors jointly produced a network of toilets in the colony. As the book shows, the commercial viability of toilets created multiple logics and a new moral geography; further, exploring the topic can help us gain a better understanding of how urban governance functioned in colonies and how it intertwined with economic contingencies within a global economic system. The intended readership includes academics and members of the general public with an interest in colonialism, public infrastructures, public health, government–business relations, and urban governance.

Caracteristici

Focuses on the creation of a network of public toilets which was mediated by land rewards Shows that the convergence of profit and morality in toilet provision created a new form of moral geography Urban governance between the colonial government and the Chinese landowners in the context of toilet provision