Soon Keong Ong 王純強
Sex:Male 男
Nationality:Singapore 新加坡
Period for Grants:3個月
CCS Grant
2006/7~2006/9
Instituion:Department of History, Cornell University, USA美國康乃爾大學歷史系
Topic:Culture Traffic and the Webs of Chinese Diaspora:Xiamen, Jinmen, and Singapore, 1843-1938文化傳遞與移民網路:廈門、金門與新加坡,1843-1938
Specialty:歷史(中國近代史)、歷史(亞洲史)
Present
Instituion:Division of Chinese, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore
新加坡南洋理工大學中文系
Specialty:歷史(亞洲史)、歷史(中國近代史)
Homepage:王純強
Work catalog
- Coming Home to a Foreign Country: Xiamen, Overseas Chinese, and the Politics of Identity, 1843-1939
Article catalog
- Ong, Soon Keong. 2002. Provide synopses in English for articles in: Kee Pookong ed. at., Genealogies and Chinese Migration Studies. Singapore: Chinese Heritage Centre. (In Chinese).
- “Chinese, but not quite: Huaqiao and the Marginalization of the Overseas Chinese.” In Journal of Chinese Overseas, vol.9, no. 1 (May 2013).
- “To Save Minnan, To Save Ourselves: The Southeast Asia Overseas Fujianese Home Village Salvation Movement.” In On the Margins of China, eds. Sherman Cochran and Paul Pickowicz (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 2010), pp. 243-266.
- 2010: “National history, transnational history, and the writing of Overseas Chinese history: Thinking through the Southeast Asia Overseas Fujianese Home Village Salvation Movement of the 1920s and 1930s” (In Chinese).
- November 2010: “Relations between Migrants and their Hometown in Modern China: A Revisit” (In Chinese).
- August 2010: “Coming Home to a Foreign Country: Lim Boon Keng in Xiamen.” Workshop on “Circuits of Cultural Entrepreneurship in China and Southeast Asia, 1900-1965” National University of Singapore, Aug. 13-15.
- July 2009: “Trade, Treaty Ports, and the Modernization of China, 1840s-1930s,” University of Florida.
- April 2008: “To Be or Not To Be Chinese: Lim Boon Keng and the Cultural Politics of Identity.” Annual Conference of the Association for Asian Studies.
- June 2007: “To Save Minnan, To Save Ourselves: The Southeast Asia Overseas Fujianese Home Village Salvation Movement.” Paper presented at the Cornell-UC San Diego joint conference on Chinese History.