Abstract
AbstractPrevious studies of the Ying Wa College (英華書院) in early Hong Kong overlooked the role of the students. The scarcity of relevant sources could well justify such an oversight. This article aims at filling this gap through the careful use of London Missionary Society (LMS) materials. Not only does it aim to highlight significant aspects of the college, its unique history, its English education and its practice of Christian faith, it also discusses the careers of some graduates in Hong Kong, China and the world. This article argues that these Ying Wa boys formed a bridge that connected the Western and Chinese worlds. Their impact was felt through the spread of Christianity and global China business, on the one hand, and as a connection between the people and the government in colonial Hong Kong, Qing China and overseas Chinese communities in Singapore and Australia.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Reference56 articles.
1. LMS. London Missionary Society Archives, deposited at SOAS Library, London.
2. Made in Hong Kong
3. Pfister, L. 2022. “Pulling the plank out of one's own eye: reflective moments of transformation gained from James Legge's Christian engagement with four notable Chinese persons”, in Chow (ed.), Scottish Missions to China, 13–49.
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