標題: [時事討論] 「選擇」做香港人? To Choose and to be a Hong Kong Person [打印本頁] 作者: felicity2010 時間: 2015-9-5 10:12 PM 標題: 「選擇」做香港人? To Choose and to be a Hong Kong Person
「選擇」做香港人? To Choose and to be a Hong Kong Person & N5 E/ m* p6 w, y2 e' M5 oTVBNOW 含有熱門話題,最新最快電視,軟體,遊戲,電影,動漫及日常生活及興趣交流等資訊。Evan Fowler 方禮倫 5 }( [$ H. V; h7 o+ KTVBNOW 含有熱門話題,最新最快電視,軟體,遊戲,電影,動漫及日常生活及興趣交流等資訊。 5 ~; w; u; M" R# V Q$ Wos.tvboxnow.com 1 g" W1 Y, [% Y1 z5 w( D7 w : D% t& S _: Q9 x tvb now,tvbnow,bttvb$ z& Q+ e/ W; T( p8 M3 R
H5 P4 {' o7 }1 R" l9 u. ] 編按:TVBNOW 含有熱門話題,最新最快電視,軟體,遊戲,電影,動漫及日常生活及興趣交流等資訊。& `7 V+ e3 O, C: T. q3 I( z
公仔箱論壇 q% Q' }( [0 l( `; _" @ 在本週的專欄, Evan 強調「選擇」當香港人的人與只以「香港人」作唯一身份的人,兩者之間是有重要的分別。 - u4 z* M; c6 u6 g; ?, Q& I; ltvb now,tvbnow,bttvb「香港身份計劃 (HKIDP) 」由方禮倫創辦,是私人資助項目,旨在記錄、歸檔和探討各種關於香港身份的活動。譯文由 Alan Chiu 提供,英文原文在譯文之下。 ; O6 Y+ j2 D, S/ B" w( a9 J 4 g$ c( u! r; r/ GIn his weekly column on Hong Kong identity, Evan highlights the important distinction between those who identify with Hong Kong by choice and those for whom a Hong Kong identity is their only reference. - [4 K/ C8 P/ Pos.tvboxnow.com公仔箱論壇8 r& H& B( n# q4 F9 j- x+ x0 F Evan Fowler is the founder of the Hong Kong Identity Project (HKIDP), a privately funded initiative to document, archive and explore the Hong Kong identity; the Chinese translation is provided by Alan Chiu.os.tvboxnow.com6 j4 D+ w% N9 N# z
* E2 h J+ [ t* S, P6 }( w***************** 6 r, |: @1 @: A# E! y- |1 R 1 }; a" ~! E$ k8 ^2 R當我們討論「香港身份」時,其中一個最重要的分別是這個身份是否從「選擇」而來的。 - }7 ]1 W% r/ Q, q2 S" ~os.tvboxnow.comTVBNOW 含有熱門話題,最新最快電視,軟體,遊戲,電影,動漫及日常生活及興趣交流等資訊。$ a& t' W+ m/ X1 C" _8 J* `% w. t
無論我們覺得「香港身份」是否有選擇時,從根本上已經改變我們如何理解這個身份以及與其關係。「香港身份」會否是個外在的身份,容許我們獨立建構起來並有原因去確定這個身份的呢?還是,這是我們的身份之根本,提供一個框架塑造我們的性格?換句話說,這是種並非發自內心、由我們選擇的身份,抑或是衷心所認同的身份?6 i/ e- F! r5 g- r
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在我之前所訪問的人當中,絕大部份都無為意兩者是有分別。然而,有些指標可以讓我們分辨到兩者。 P y0 O1 o( T; _0 T% C! t我時常都問人,他們從何時開始意識到自己的「香港身份」。我要他們形容的,不單是何時,而是如何有趣地談及首次有意識地認同「香港身份」的經驗。答案大致可分為兩類:一類人指向個人的心路轉變——「香港開始有家的感覺」;另一類人則開始意識到自己並不孤單,並在「有共同經歷的身份」中尋找意義。os.tvboxnow.com6 \6 w5 w! s- i: X9 g
6 ~; N0 W9 l/ i& @% }5 x, | Z8 Aos.tvboxnow.comOne of the most important distinctions to make when talking with people about their Hong Kong identity is whether this identity is chosen. / i3 R& p) L- D: F- j/ _tvb now,tvbnow,bttvb / g, M- J0 O* }2 h/ R A" I0 O# A
Whether or not we feel we have a choice in identifying with Hong Kong fundamentally alters both our understanding and our relationship with this identity. Is the Hong Kong identity an external identity, separately constructed from ourselves and for which we have reason to identify? Or is it foundational to our identity, providing the framework on which our own person is constructed? In other words, is this an identity we choose from without or is it an identity we find from within? # U8 J4 u7 k. c PTVBNOW 含有熱門話題,最新最快電視,軟體,遊戲,電影,動漫及日常生活及興趣交流等資訊。 1 R* X6 A) K; X N7 A公仔箱論壇In almost all cases people I interview are not aware of this distinction. There are however a few markers. / Q8 z8 F! U) M" a" }; M- |- W: T4 ^4 k7 ]% z/ t o1 K' ?
I often ask people to describe when they first became aware of their Hong Kong identity. It is not just when, but also how they describe their first experience of making a conscious identification that is interesting. Answers fall broadly into two categories: those who point to a personal and transformative moment when “Hong Kong began to feel like home”; and those who experience a realisation that they are not alone, and find meaning in an identification from a shared experience. 1 X# F7 j& E$ N" a8 X! f( Y/ _ + A7 {2 t9 ?4 w0 g/ Jtvb now,tvbnow,bttvbWhen people talk of “realising how much I like this city” and of “deciding to stay” Hong Kong is understood externally from who they are. Their personal identity exists separately, and is not inherently tied to the choice. This Hong Kong identity is engaged and understood not from within ourselves, but from projecting who we are already outwards. There is also an underlying presumption that there is an alternative. Hong Kong is understood comparatively. To decide to stay, and call Hong Kong home, presumes that there is a choice.TVBNOW 含有熱門話題,最新最快電視,軟體,遊戲,電影,動漫及日常生活及興趣交流等資訊。. ~, D: D$ V) ~& I( l
As a choice this identity is rationalised. Thus we often hear of the city being “safe” and “efficient”, or of the “great food.” This is identity as fashion, something outside of us that we select as we feel it to best represents us at a moment in our lives. It is pleasing to our eyes, comfortable on our skin, at tune with our values. But for it to be pleasing to our eyes is quite different than for it to have shaped how we see. % w2 d- K6 R4 X8 v" s2 R! G8 r / X" {. ?6 {/ ^* Q: A! Itvb now,tvbnow,bttvbFor others a Hong Kong identity is not an issue of what fits but of who they are. For these Hong Kong people their identity is not a choice but an acknowledgement. People with this identity often struggle to tell me when it was that they first identified with Hong Kong, as they have always had this bond. They did not choose Hong Kong as home, but have instead formed a concept of home around Hong Kong. Often they will describe their identification as a “love” or “feeling”. They do not describe an experience of falling in love with Hong Kong and establishing the bonds that tie them to their home, but highlight instead those moments when this love was expressed. For some this expression came when they first left Hong Kong, or when they first spoke to people with whom they do not share a common sense of home. 9 ^! Y5 W; M- o7 y& b o; I4 j/ d) S5 z2 j
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In recent times many have said that the greatest expression has been in the sense of solidarity they have felt during protests, when for the first time they have come to realise that they are not alone not only in their values, but in how they understand and feel about their home. What was once a personal identification has become part of what they believe to be a distinctly Hong Kong identity.tvb now,tvbnow,bttvb# n' @4 V& N2 Y i d$ h9 ]+ `' h
( G' A1 u; e2 I8 gAnother word I often hear in relation to how people understand their Hong Kong identity is “family”. The existence of a familial relationship need not be reasoned or rationalised. Whether they like Hong Kong, or show interest in their home or openly care is irrelevant to the relationship. & r3 A- D# i: e2 a* {0 mtvb now,tvbnow,bttvb7 S& T! H( ^/ _4 b5 F# O
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To have a choice though is to lose this certainty. Needing to rationalise their choice, those with a chosen Hong Kong identity almost invariably view Hong Kong positively. This is especially true of those who have come to identify with Hong Kong since the 1980s, when this city became more a beacon of opportunity than a place of refuge, and to call Hong Kong home became increasingly a positive choice.0 E/ a4 K6 W( j9 p
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The difference is again apparent in the subtle differences in the way people answer questions about their identity. Talk of “Hong Kong food” and the city as an exciting or multicultural place may be the standard answers thought at schools, but if these identifications are themselves, to a degree, imposed.7 K3 T. R. I- D+ L
# M0 x' |, W ^& I0 I) I( e0 dTVBNOW 含有熱門話題,最新最快電視,軟體,遊戲,電影,動漫及日常生活及興趣交流等資訊。Without a comparative framework, many people who identify only with Hong Kong do not talk so generally. They do not talk of “Hong Kong food” being good, but of specific types of food being good at specific places and for specific reasons. As one interviewee recently said, the “cheung fun (rice rolls) in Cheung Chau” are particularly good, and specifically “those made by the auntie by the ferry pier.” Hong Kong is both described and understood, and the quality of food judged within its own context.. w% W4 S, L' R9 W' d# a
5 I2 W& i1 L/ ?% G+ S公仔箱論壇It is not that those who so identify with Hong Kong have neither the imagination nor the means to picture a home outside of Hong Kong. Many do, and in recent years many have looked longingly towards Taiwan. But they still look outwards from a perspective that is very much set by their identity as Hong Kong people. Much as we need not like our family, we still feel bonded to them, and realise that to sever this bond is to discard much that has shaped the person we are today. - T6 c* {$ }9 g4 q/ \, p1 H' O/ V. c, r6 w/ T
It would also be wrong to dismiss the Hong Kong identity of those who identify with Hong Kong by choice. Identity is very personal, and when taken beyond the individual should be defined not by differences but the core ways in which we relate. I would like to think what ultimately defines the Hong Kong identity is a love of Hong Kong, and love takes many forms. We should recognise these differences.公仔箱論壇' t+ H7 m: U3 M6 J$ q( S( q% a