The Fort Worth Press - 'Private rebellion': Hong Kong's anglophone poets gain recognition abroad

USD -
AED 3.672995
AFN 67.735624
ALL 93.676927
AMD 389.366092
ANG 1.79184
AOA 913.000318
ARS 998.216778
AUD 1.534425
AWG 1.8025
AZN 1.706653
BAM 1.866649
BBD 2.007368
BDT 118.805833
BGN 1.87785
BHD 0.374708
BIF 2936.769267
BMD 1
BND 1.340014
BOB 6.908201
BRL 5.8226
BSD 0.994226
BTN 84.384759
BWP 13.582568
BYN 3.25367
BYR 19600
BZD 2.004028
CAD 1.394705
CDF 2871.000205
CHF 0.89108
CLF 0.035245
CLP 972.511859
CNY 7.244503
CNH 7.248185
COP 4389.75
CRC 506.418516
CUC 1
CUP 26.5
CVE 105.825615
CZK 24.179034
DJF 177.047741
DKK 7.117298
DOP 59.918874
DZD 133.478406
EGP 49.660103
ERN 15
ETB 121.711477
EUR 0.954475
FJD 2.27595
FKP 0.789317
GBP 0.79414
GEL 2.73972
GGP 0.789317
GHS 15.795384
GIP 0.789317
GMD 70.999782
GNF 8569.792412
GTQ 7.717261
GYD 209.15591
HKD 7.78192
HNL 25.124314
HRK 7.133259
HTG 130.508232
HUF 392.711003
IDR 15867.3
ILS 3.70175
IMP 0.789317
INR 84.275304
IQD 1302.422357
IRR 42075.000286
ISK 139.649648
JEP 0.789317
JMD 158.38702
JOD 0.709099
JPY 154.425039
KES 129.469904
KGS 86.520298
KHR 4002.863278
KMF 472.508345
KPW 899.999621
KRW 1400.894973
KWD 0.30785
KYD 0.828545
KZT 496.420868
LAK 21838.433199
LBP 89031.629985
LKR 289.365682
LRD 180.450118
LSL 17.940997
LTL 2.95274
LVL 0.60489
LYD 4.855212
MAD 10.057392
MDL 18.13427
MGA 4640.464237
MKD 58.725281
MMK 3247.960992
MNT 3397.999946
MOP 7.971348
MRU 39.559055
MUR 46.829694
MVR 15.459862
MWK 1723.996411
MXN 20.382925
MYR 4.455497
MZN 63.910277
NAD 17.940997
NGN 1688.459659
NIO 36.583154
NOK 11.03614
NPR 134.268671
NZD 1.70866
OMR 0.382719
PAB 0.99976
PEN 3.769947
PGK 4.002863
PHP 58.965991
PKR 276.089812
PLN 4.13585
PYG 7761.46754
QAR 3.646048
RON 4.750095
RSD 112.338997
RUB 103.733309
RWF 1357.193987
SAR 3.7544
SBD 8.383555
SCR 13.617752
SDG 601.497606
SEK 10.98375
SGD 1.34544
SHP 0.789317
SLE 22.730317
SLL 20969.504736
SOS 568.169888
SRD 35.494036
STD 20697.981008
SVC 8.699677
SYP 2512.529858
SZL 17.934793
THB 34.560177
TJS 10.647152
TMT 3.5
TND 3.17616
TOP 2.3421
TRY 34.571978
TTD 6.752501
TWD 32.458499
TZS 2649.999808
UAH 41.131388
UGX 3694.035222
UYU 42.516436
UZS 12754.82935
VES 46.602923
VND 25412.5
VUV 118.722009
WST 2.791591
XAF 626.062515
XAG 0.032653
XAU 0.000375
XCD 2.70255
XDR 0.756295
XOF 626.062515
XPF 113.823776
YER 249.92498
ZAR 18.063293
ZMK 9001.20088
ZMW 27.464829
ZWL 321.999592
  • RIO

    -0.2200

    62.35

    -0.35%

  • SCS

    0.2300

    13.27

    +1.73%

  • BTI

    0.4000

    37.38

    +1.07%

  • CMSC

    0.0320

    24.672

    +0.13%

  • BCC

    3.4200

    143.78

    +2.38%

  • NGG

    1.0296

    63.11

    +1.63%

  • BCE

    0.0900

    26.77

    +0.34%

  • RBGPF

    59.2400

    59.24

    +100%

  • CMSD

    0.0150

    24.46

    +0.06%

  • AZN

    1.3700

    65.63

    +2.09%

  • GSK

    0.2600

    33.96

    +0.77%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0100

    6.79

    -0.15%

  • BP

    0.2000

    29.72

    +0.67%

  • VOD

    0.1323

    8.73

    +1.52%

  • JRI

    -0.0200

    13.21

    -0.15%

  • RELX

    0.9900

    46.75

    +2.12%

'Private rebellion': Hong Kong's anglophone poets gain recognition abroad
'Private rebellion': Hong Kong's anglophone poets gain recognition abroad / Photo: © AFP

'Private rebellion': Hong Kong's anglophone poets gain recognition abroad

As a teenager stuck in Hong Kong's pressure-cooker school system, Eric Yip found his escape in writing poetry -- never dreaming that one day his work would go on to win a top prize halfway across the world.

Text size:

In March, at the age of 19, he became the youngest ever winner of the United Kingdom's National Poetry Competition.

He beat more than 7,000 contenders from 100 countries and placed himself squarely among a cohort of Hong Kong poets writing in English that has found increasing recognition over the past decade.

Now an economics undergraduate at Cambridge, Yip recalled the "liberating" feeling of reading material that had nothing to do with high-school English classes taught according to a strict syllabus.

"Writing poems was a private rebellion against this regimented approach," Yip told AFP.

His award-winning "Fricatives" begins with the narrator taking English lessons as a "spectacled boy with a Hong Kong accent" and opens up to explore issues of language, race, sex and migration.

A former British colony, Hong Kong has developed its own literary tradition in both Chinese and English, although anglophone poets remain a minority and receive little establishment support.

"There's always a certain estrangement one feels when writing in a second language", Yip said, but English has now become his "private language" in which words flow more naturally.

"What matters to me is the emotional truth of writing. If English is what will get me closer to that, then I'll keep using it."

- Queer poetry in spotlight -

Anglophone poets who spoke to AFP agreed their output was hardly mainstream, but said writing from the margins allowed them to challenge Hong Kong's norms.

Yip's win caused a stir in Hong Kong media, though most newspapers were silent on the poem's description of a gay encounter -- mirroring the mixed reactions of some local readers.

"The sexual element and the poem's queerness are absolutely essential," Yip said.

"I was thinking about the parallels with oracy and colonialism, how it all ties back to submission."

Other Hong Kong poets who have found success in tackling LGBTQ themes include Nicholas Wong, whose collection "Crevasse" won one of the best-known prizes for queer literature worldwide in 2016.

His latest collection was a finalist for the same Lambda Literary Awards' gay poetry prize this year.

Wong said his writing tapped into themes about "everyday desire" in a way he found immediate and spontaneous.

In a recent poem, the speaker imagines inviting his father to his wedding held in Taiwan -- the only jurisdiction in Asia where gay marriage is legal.

Wong, 43, who teaches at a local university, said he had witnessed Hong Kong's community of poets grow into something "more substantial, less fragile".

Having been a published poet for over a decade, Wong said he felt emboldened to experiment with language in a way that might feel obscure to Western readers.

"Maybe because it's my second language, I don't assume it will love me back. So I can do whatever I want with it and to it," he told AFP.

- Poetic dissent -

Academics have shown "growing interest" in Hong Kong poetry to understand how residents feel about the city's social and political transformation, according to scholar and poet Jennifer Wong.

The massive citywide democracy protests three years ago -- and Beijing's subsequent crackdown --proved a watershed.

The movement included violence that some experts say left many quietly traumatised, while solidarity between protesters gave rise to outbursts of creativity.

Last year anonymous poets behind the US-based Bauhinia Project published "Hong Kong Without Us", which they described as a crowdsourced "found poetry" book.

During the protests, they translated snippets of Hong Kongers' voices -- from social media, graffiti, news articles and public submissions -- and distributed them on postcards in the United States.

"We were especially interested in... how the urgency of the politics holds out the potential for a vulnerable, emotional voice," one of the poets told AFP.

"We were just trying to articulate the voice that we imagined to be the best of Hong Kong."

The project blossomed into a book and has become an access point for US readers to "engage emotionally" with Hong Kongers beyond news headlines, the poet said.

"Hong Kong Without Us" concludes with a postscript saying the book is contraband.

In 2020, Beijing imposed a sweeping national security law in Hong Kong that has criminalised most dissent, and many protest-themed literary works have been taken off bookstore shelves.

The poet said he was worried that the repressive political climate would seal shut the "narrow crack" for Hong Kongers to express emotional vulnerability.

"I don't know... what's going to happen in the future when that already slim crack might be gone."

A.Williams--TFWP