Journal Articles
A corpus‐based discourse analysis of liberal studies textbooks in Hong Kong: Legitimatizing populism
- A corpus‐based discourse analysis of liberal studies textbooks in Hong Kong: Legitimatizing populism
- Politics and Governance, 11(2), 261-271, 2023
- Cogitatio Press
- 2023
-
- Hong Kong
-
- 1997.7 onwards
-
- Unknown or Unspecified
- Researchers have discussed Hong Kong’s localist identities, nativist sentiments, and populism, but have not widely examined the extent to which populism could be perceived in education in Hong Kong. As the chief participants of the Occupying Central and the radical Anti-Extradition Bill movements in Hong Kong were students, this suggests the need to explore the relationship between populism and education, particularly the then-controversial liberal studies textbooks. According to contemporary news reports, liberal studies textbooks contained much content stigmatising the Chinese mainland. Previous studies of liberal studies textbooks applied qualitative discourse analysis methods. In this study, mixed-method analysis was applied to a specialised corpus comprising seven commercial liberal studies textbooks containing 248,339 Chinese characters in total to explore the extent to which liberal studies textbooks contain information concerning the key features of populism—the heightened division between the inner and outer groups. A division was found between positive images of Hong Kong and negative images of China in the narratives of commercial liberal studies textbooks. Accordingly, the textbooks can be understood to contain populism. The present study advocates that relevant educational watchdogs in Hong Kong provide more guidance on the writing and publishing of liberal studies textbooks in the future, keeping the enquiry-based spirit of the liberal studies course fulfilled, and urges stakeholders of Hong Kong education to consider teaching peace education and developing a more inclusive environment. © 2023 by the author(s).
-
- English
- Journal Articles
-
- 21832463
- https://bibliography.lib.eduhk.hk/en/bibs/f90ca77f
- 2024-07-11
Recent Journal Articles
Fostering non-aviation undergraduates’ aviation literacy in an online aviation laboratory: Effects on students’ perceptions, motivation, industry optimismJournal Articles
Design and validation of the AI literacy questionnaire: The affective, behavioural, cognitive and ethical approachJournal Articles
Empowering student self-regulated learning and science education through ChatGPT: A pioneering pilot studyJournal Articles
Using digital story writing as a pedagogy to develop AI literacy among primary studentsJournal Articles
Business (teaching) as usual amid the COVID-19 pandemic: A case study of online teaching practice in Hong KongJournal Articles
Augmented reality book design for teaching and learning architectural heritage: Educational heritage in Hong Kong Central and Western DistrictJournal Articles
Physical activities in Hong Kong kindergartens: Grade-level differences and venue utilizationJournal Articles
Gaining or losing momentum? The perceived educational role of university student hostels in Hong Kong from 1980 to 2020Journal Articles