Ambrose Y.C. King
SBS JP
Vice-Chancellor of the Chinese University of Hong Kong
In office
2002–2004
ChancellorTung Chee-hwa
Preceded byArthur Li
Succeeded byLawrence Lau
Personal details
Born (1935-02-14) 14 February 1935
Alma materCheng Kung Senior High School
National Taiwan University (BA)
National Chengchi University (MA)
University of Pittsburgh (MA, PhD)
OccupationProfessor of sociology
Honorary DegreesHon DLitt (HKUST)
Ambrose King
Chinese金耀基

Ambrose King Yeo-chi, SBS, JP (Chinese: 金耀基; born 14 February 1935) is a Hong Kong sociologist, educator, writer and academic. He was formerly vice-chancellor of the Chinese University of Hong Kong (CUHK).

Personal life

Ambrose King received most of his education in Taiwan. He graduated from Taipei Municipal Chenggong Senior High School, earned a B.A from National Taiwan University and M.A. degree in political studies from National Chengchi University. Then he went to the United States and earned his PhD from the University of Pittsburgh in 1970.[1]

Career

After earning his PhD, he joined the Department of Sociology of CUHK in 1970. In 1974, he was promoted to Senior Lecturer, in 1979 to Reader and in 1983 Professor of Sociology in CUHK. From 1977 to 1985, he served as Head of New Asia College and in 1989 he became Pro-Vice-Chancellor of the university before succeeding Arthur Li. In 2002 he was appointed Vice-Chancellor of CUHK, and retired in 2004. He is now a Professor of Sociology in the CUHK, teaching the course Individual and Society.

King has written essays; Cambridge Musings (1977), Heidelberg Musings (1986) and Ever in my Heart (2005). He is also a calligrapher.

Research focus and contributions

His research interest are modernisation and modernity of China, and the role of tradition in social-cultural transformation. He employed the theoretical framework of Max Weber to study the development of Chinese culture in the process of modernisation. He also tried to measure the costs and benefits of modernisation after the breakdown of the old Chinese dynastic orders and clan systems in the late 19th century.

He wrote theses on Hong Kong society, including The Administrative Absorption of Politics in Hong Kong (1975), which argued that the British cooptation of local elites would lead to "synarchy", a form of joint rule; Social Life and Development in Hong Kong (1985); The Special Character of Hong Kong's Polity and its Democratic Prospects (1987); One Country, Two Systems: An Idea on Trial (1995); and Hong Kong: A City with the Most Traits of Modernity in Chinese Societies (2000). He held that to understand Hong Kong, one cannot overlook two important threads, namely, colonial rule and capitalism. He introduced the administrative absorption politics model (行政吸納政治) in 1975.

When he visited Cambridge University in 1975, he wrote his first essay on university education, entitled Two Cultures and Technological Humanism. In 1983 he published The Idea of a University, a work that was the fruit of many years of reflection and study. In 1994, he was elected a Fellow of Academia Sinica in Taiwan, and in the following years he has been honoured by many universities.

Selected works

  • China’s Great Transformation: Selected Essays on Confucianism, Modernization, and Democracy, 2018, Hong Kong: Chinese University Press
  • "Chinese Religion." In Understanding Contemporary China. Edited by Gamer, R. New York: Lynn Reinner.
  • The Idea of University (大學之理念), 2001, London: Oxford University Press
  • Chinese Politics and Culture (中國政治與文化), 1997, London: Oxford University Press
  • State Confucianism and Its Transformation: The Restructuring of the State-Society Relation in Taiwan and The Transformation of Confucianism in the Post-Confucian Era: The Emergence of Rationalistic Traditionalism in Hong Kong
    "Confucian Traditions in East Asian Modernity", 1996, edited by Tu Wei-ming. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press
  • Chinese Society and Culture (中國社會與文化), 1992, London: Oxford University Press
  • From Traditional to Modernised (從傳統到現代), 1992, London: Oxford University Press
  • "The Political Culture of Kwun Tong: A Chinese Community in Hong Kong." Southeast Asian Journal of Social Science 5.1-2 (1977): 123–41.
  • "Administrative Absorption of Politics in Hong Kong: Emphasis on the Grass Roots Level." Asian Survey 15.5 (1975): 422–39.

Award

See also

References

  1. "Department of Sociology, CUHK". www.cuhk.edu.hk. Retrieved 8 January 2019.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.