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Table of Contents
Cover
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments
Prologue: Between Empires
Drifting empires
Contesting the 'Macanese' identity
Cosmopolitan and transnational arenas
A kaleidoscope of Macanese experiences
Bibliography
1. Crossing Imperial Borders
The tightknit oligarchy
A clerk, a businessman and a newspaper editor
Channeling Macau's woes into Hong Kong developments
Bibliography
2. Sandwiched in the Workplace
The roots of the Macanese as 'middle' people
D'Almada's plight
Grand-pré's poor performance
Port wine and new opportunities
Bibliography
3. Horseracing, Theater and Camões
Strictly male, strictly rich, strictly colored
Abraço fraternal (fraternal embrace) and Camões
A stage for middle-class Macanese men
Bibliography
4. Macanese Publics Fight for the 'Hongkong Man'
From Hong Kong to Lisbon to Shanghai
Globalizing colonial Hong Kong
The 'Hongkong man'
Bibliography
5. Uniting to Divide, Dividing to Unite
'Kowloon Macanese' vs. 'Hong Kong Macanese'
Nationalizing the 'Portuguese of the East'
Contesting Macanese patriotism
Por Deus e pela Pátria: Portuguese nationalism in Hong Kong
Printing and disseminating diasporic nationalism
Bibliography
Epilogue: A Place in the Sun
Being Macanese in wartime Hong Kong
Rethinking identity as response
Towards a world without labels
Bibliography
Appendix: Summary of Featured Macanese Individuals
Index
List of Figures
Figure 1 Evelina Marques d'Oliveira and Thomas Herbert Edgar
Figure 2 Brian Edgar, 1950s and 1970s
Figure 3 Manuel Pereira, c. 1800
Figure 4 Leonardo and José Maria d'Almada e Castro
Figure 5 Map of Hong Kong, c. 1865
Figure 6 Club Lusitano Inauguration Ball, c. 1866
Figure 7 Montalto de Jesus in Washington, D.C., c. 1921.
Figure 8 Report on war evacuation in The Hongkong Telegraph, July 1940
Figure 9 Map showing Hong Kong's Macanese institutions, c. 1941
Figure 10 Leaflet of Liga Portuguesa's hymn
Figure 11 José Maria 'Jack' Braga's wartime license to possess a weapon.
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments
Prologue: Between Empires
Drifting empires
Contesting the 'Macanese' identity
Cosmopolitan and transnational arenas
A kaleidoscope of Macanese experiences
Bibliography
1. Crossing Imperial Borders
The tightknit oligarchy
A clerk, a businessman and a newspaper editor
Channeling Macau's woes into Hong Kong developments
Bibliography
2. Sandwiched in the Workplace
The roots of the Macanese as 'middle' people
D'Almada's plight
Grand-pré's poor performance
Port wine and new opportunities
Bibliography
3. Horseracing, Theater and Camões
Strictly male, strictly rich, strictly colored
Abraço fraternal (fraternal embrace) and Camões
A stage for middle-class Macanese men
Bibliography
4. Macanese Publics Fight for the 'Hongkong Man'
From Hong Kong to Lisbon to Shanghai
Globalizing colonial Hong Kong
The 'Hongkong man'
Bibliography
5. Uniting to Divide, Dividing to Unite
'Kowloon Macanese' vs. 'Hong Kong Macanese'
Nationalizing the 'Portuguese of the East'
Contesting Macanese patriotism
Por Deus e pela Pátria: Portuguese nationalism in Hong Kong
Printing and disseminating diasporic nationalism
Bibliography
Epilogue: A Place in the Sun
Being Macanese in wartime Hong Kong
Rethinking identity as response
Towards a world without labels
Bibliography
Appendix: Summary of Featured Macanese Individuals
Index
List of Figures
Figure 1 Evelina Marques d'Oliveira and Thomas Herbert Edgar
Figure 2 Brian Edgar, 1950s and 1970s
Figure 3 Manuel Pereira, c. 1800
Figure 4 Leonardo and José Maria d'Almada e Castro
Figure 5 Map of Hong Kong, c. 1865
Figure 6 Club Lusitano Inauguration Ball, c. 1866
Figure 7 Montalto de Jesus in Washington, D.C., c. 1921.
Figure 8 Report on war evacuation in The Hongkong Telegraph, July 1940
Figure 9 Map showing Hong Kong's Macanese institutions, c. 1941
Figure 10 Leaflet of Liga Portuguesa's hymn
Figure 11 José Maria 'Jack' Braga's wartime license to possess a weapon.