About the Author:
Hugh Baker is Emeritus Professor of Chinese at the School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London. He has published books on Chinese kinship, Hong Kong history and culture, the overseas Chinese, and the Cantonese and Mandarin languages. His published articles cover a wide range of Chinese cultural topics including food, symbolism, death, xenophobia, clan, marriage, slang, minorities, fung shui, migration, and religion. He was chief editorial consultant to the twelve-part television series The Heart of the Dragon, and his much-repeated Baker's Dozen on Radio Television Hong Kong ran to four series each of thirteen talks. He served as Chinese language training adviser to the Hong Kong Government 1973–75, and frequently writes opinions and gives evidence in court on Chinese customary law.
Review:
“Professor Baker makes it possible to recognise what still remains of the architecture, agriculture and traditional dress of this historic area and also to understand something of the unique way of life followed here for a thousand years that is now stead
“... far and away the best and most enlightening introduction to the customs and history of the New Territories ...” – James Hayes, author of The Great Difference Hong Kong’s New Territories and Its People 1898–2004, in the Journal of the Hong Kong Branch
“Hugh Baker’s three volumes of Ancestral Images are classics. There is nothing comparable now or when the volumes were first published.” – James L. Watson, Fairbank Professor of Chinese Society and Professor of Anthropology, Harvard University
“The text is lively and self-deprecating, and although journalistic in tone, it is informed by both first-hand experience and fluency with relevant secondary scholarship of the time . . . It serves as an enjoyable and idiosyncratic collection of snapshots
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