Subject: Chinese Christians--Hong Kong--History

From singing out-of-tone to creating contextualized Cantonese contemporary worship songs : Hong Kong in the decentralization of Chinese Christianity
AuthorHung Shin Fung
CollectionRicci Institute Library
LanguageEnglish
TypeArticle (in Periodical)
ShelfDigital Archives
Call NumberPL1455.H86 2024
Description14 p.
Note

"From singing 'out-of-tone' to creating contextualized Cantonese contemporary worship songs : Hong Kong in the decentralization of Chinese Christianity" / Hung Shin Fung.

Religions 15 (2024).

This article belongs to the Special Issue Expressions of Chinese Christianity in Texts and Contexts: In Memory of Our Mentor Professor R. G. Tiedemann (1941–2019).

Local access dig.pdf [Hung-From Singing Out-of-Tone.pdf]

Abstract:

For over a century, Hong Kong Christians have sung Chinese hymns in an “out-of-tone” manner. Lyrics in traditional hymnals were translated or written to be sung in Mandarin, the national language, but most locals speak Cantonese, another Sinitic and tonal language. Singing goes “out-of-tone” when Mandarin hymns are sung in Cantonese, which often causes meaning distortions. Why did Hong Kong Christians accept this practice? How did they move from singing “out-of-tone” to creating contextualized Cantonese contemporary worship songs? What does this process reveal about the evolution of Chinese Christianity? From a Hong Kong-centered perspective, this article reconstructs the city’s hymnological development. I consider the creation of national Mandarin hymnals during Republican China as producing a nationalistic Mainland-centric and Mandarin-centric Chinese Christianity. Being on the periphery, Hong Kong Christians did not have the resources to develop their own hymns and thus continued to worship “out-of-tone”. With the decline of the old Chinese Christian center of Shanghai, the growth of Cantonese culture and Hongkonger identity, and the influence of Western pop and Christian music, local Christians began to create Cantonese contemporary worship songs. This hymnological contextualization reflects and contributes to not only the decolonization but, more importantly, the decentralization of Chinese Christianity.

Other people's children : Protestant missionaries, Chinese Christians and constructions of childhood in colonial Hong Kong, 1880-1941
AuthorPang Ching-yee [Peng Jingyi] 彭靜儀
PlaceHong Kong 香港
PublisherUniversity of Hong Kong 香港大學
CollectionRicci Institute Library
LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis/Dissertation (PDF)
ShelfDigital Archives
Call NumberLC432.C6 P25 2011d
Descriptiondig.pdf. [vi, 232 p.]
NoteOther people's children : Protestant missionaries, Chinese Christians and constructions of childhood in colonial Hong Kong, 1880-1941 / by Pang Ching Yee.
Thesis (M. Phil.)--University of Hong Kong, 2011.
Includes bibliographical references (p. 214-232).
Online at HKU Scholars Hub.
Local access dig.pdf [Pang-ChineseChristianHK.pdf]