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The Cultural Adaptation of Early Hong Kong Immigrants in Taiwan

Author :  Lan-Hung Nora Chiang

Product Details

Country
Hong Kong
Publisher
Hong Kong institute ofAsia-Pacific Studies
ISBN 9789624412390
Format PaperBack
Language English
Year of Publication 2018
Bib. Info 32p.
Product Weight 60 gms.
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Product Description

As Taiwan is becoming a destination to which an increasing number of Hong Kong people are contemplating emigrating, the experiences of Hong Kong immigrants who settled in Taiwan somewhat earlier might be instructive. This is a qualitative study involving interviews with 40 Hong Kong people (22 males and 18 females) aged between 39 to 77, who came to Taiwan between 1945 and 2002. The sample and family migrants, dispatched employees, and entrepreneurs. Most have settled down successfully in a variety of white collar professional jobs. Despite similarities in Chinese culture, Hong Kong people face various difficulties with the culture and customs of Taiwan. A lack of ability to speak Minnan, the major dialect of local Taiwanese, or the persistence of a Cantonese accent when speaking Mandarin, may have alienated their integration by acting as an obstacle to obtaining a better understanding of the dynamics of human relationships in Taiwan. Moreover, they encountered various cultural differences. Earlier female immigrants, in particular, found Taiwanese society to be much more patriarchal than that of Hong Kong.

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