"This book provides what is arguably the first sustained account of the contemporary lives of second and third generation South Asian ethnic minorities in Hong Kong. Leung makes visible the force of their creative expressions and coins the original concept of participatory-performance to articulate their ambivalent tactics of resistance and belonging. For anyone interested in the complexities of race and racism in Asia today, and how media and cultural forms are powerful sites for constituting minor identity and agency, this book is a must read."
Professor Audrey Yue, Head of Communications and New Media, National University of Singapore
"The excitement of this book lies in its deft illustration of minoritized peoples creative inhabitation of the difficult cultural and affective spaces between their resistance to minoritization and their desire to belong in their own home city. Leung reveals how south Asian-descent and other non-Chinese Hong Kongers are agents of culture in the city, exercising creative forms of tactical belonging through artistic and mediated channels. Chapters open windows onto a wealth of cultural forms, from social media to public service radio to stand-up comedy and the kaleidoscopic scenes of community fashion practice among the citys minority talents. The scenes the book engages are placed in rich historical context, and brought into generative conversation with a range of theoretical perspectives from postcolonial theory and critical multicultural studies to media and performance studies. Crucially, the book diversifies multicultural studies by de-westernizing the frame, adding to a small but dynamic emergent body of scholarship on multiculturalisms in Asia.
Leungs work exemplifies the irrepressible energies of cultural studies in and of Asia as an (un)disciplinary formation able to bring fresh and deeply engaged understanding to complex and fast-changing cultural, human and political scenes. Combining seriousness of political purpose with palpable delight at the creative vitality of the scenes it engages, the book grapples with the oppressions of the present while never letting go of the hope that the grassroots energies we witness today hold the seeds of a brighter collective future."
Dr Fran Martin, Associate Professor & Reader, Culture and Communication, University of Melbourne, Australia
Lisa Leung is one of the leading voices in cultural studies today. Her ethnographic eye and ear, her feel for the prevailing political economy, and her humane understanding of immigrant experiences combine with crisp prose to make this crucial reading for us all."
Professor Toby Miller, Universidad Autonoma Metropolitana, Cuajimalpa, Mexico