Member - Web-Zine / E-Zine " /> oneworldtalk :: View topic - Historian pursued identity for Australian-born Chinese
oneworldtalk Forum Index oneworldtalk
discussion of world issues - politics, economics, social; and have fun with food, travel and the arts
 
 HomeHome   FAQFAQ   SearchSearch   MemberlistMemberlist   UsergroupsUsergroups    CalendarCalendar    RegisterRegister 
 ProfileProfile   Log in to check your private messagesLog in to check your private messages   Log inLog in 

Welcome
Welcome to oneworldtalk.

You are currently viewing our boards as a guest. This means that you have limited access to our site. By registering as a member, you will be able to post topics, perform searches, communicate privately with other members, participate in polls, upload information and enjoy many other special features. Registration is fast, simple, and absolutely free. So please do not hesitate, join our community today!

Our regular writers are featured on Ezine!

Historian pursued identity for Australian-born Chinese

 
Post new topic   Reply to topic    oneworldtalk Forum Index -> Peranakan, Eurasian, Diaspora and Cross Cultures
View previous topic :: View next topic  
Author Message
orange blossom



Joined: 20 Mar 2007
Posts: 1238
Location: Australia

PostPosted: Sat Jul 05, 2008 9:53 am    Post subject: Historian pursued identity for Australian-born Chinese Reply with quote

Henry Chan (1937-2008)

http://www.smh.com.au/news/obituaries/historian-pursued-identity-for-australianborn-chinese/2008/07/04/1214951054103.html

Quote:
THE most striking thing about Henry Chan was his drive. He was a scholar of international renown in the history and philosophy of science, a community historian, a tireless partisan in the culture wars, a gifted networker and organiser, an energetic institution builder and a generous teacher. Running through it all was an iron will to secure recognition for Chinese-Australians as Australians, and likewise of Chinese-New Zealanders as New Zealanders.

Henry Min-hsi Chan, who has died aged 70, was born in Sungai, southern China, shortly before the outbreak of war with Japan, the only son of Chan Runling and his wife, Huang Lixia.

Henry's great-grandfather had migrated to Australia in the 19th century and his son, who took the surname Hunt, started an import-export business in Wellington, NSW, where Henry's father grew up. Commerce between Canton (now Guangzhou) and Australia was strong in the 1930s. The business took his father between the two, in the course of which he married in China. In 1933 he was sent to Auckland to set up a branch of the family greengrocery.

In 1940, Henry and his mother joined him there, leaving his two sisters with their grandparents. There was now a large family spread across the Tasman engaged in business and community activities exposing Henry to Chinese networking from an early age.

Henry's father wanted him in the family business but Henry wanted to go to university. He left home and was fostered by the Reverend Robert McDowall and his wife until he finished high school at Auckland Grammar. While at school, he took New Zealand citizenship.

He went on to Canterbury University in Christchurch and later taught in Napier. In 1968, he was a junior lecturer in history at Massey University, Palmerston North, where he met Mary Joiner, a lecturer in English literature. They were married in 1970 and Chan earned his MA in New Zealand.

In 1974, when the junior lectureship came to an end and Mary had study leave, they went to London where Chan studied for another MA, in Chinese and Japanese history, at the School of Oriental and African Studies, part of the University of London.

They returned to New Zealand in 1975 and the following year Mary took up a lectureship at the University of NSW, where she stayed until her retirement in 2000. Henry worked for a time in the Rare Book Library at Sydney University and in 1986 took up a lectureship in Chinese history at Newcastle University. He stayed there, commuting to Sydney each week, until he retired in 1998 and the Chans moved to Katoomba.

Henry Chan knew and loved both Australia and New Zealand, and was passionate about his Chinese ancestry. It bothered him that someone might imagine there was something inconsistent about the mixture, and he spent much of his life showing there was not. He could be impatient with growing signs of a self-righteous "victimisation" mentality among young Chinese in China and Australia, which he felt did credit to no one and fuelled intolerance.

His convictions drove Chan at breakneck speed through the years of the Howard government. He organised conferences and workshops, brought together community and academic networks, set up heritage coalitions, developed digital resources, email lists and websites, won funding for heritage projects, and alerted local community historians to wider developments in the country and Australian scholars to international developments in the field.

He had a hand in virtually every important event and institutional initiative in Chinese-Australian studies over the past two decades. Through these activities, he helped to remake the field and, in his own way, to refashion Australia into the land he always imagined it to be: one in which the values he cherished as an Australian were seen as part of a common human heritage rather than the sole legacy of an Anglo-Saxon elite.

In 2004, he was awarded a fellowship at the National Library in New Zealand (Wellington) where he studied Chinese immigration to New Zealand. A book on immigration from Zengcheng (in Guangdong province), Zengcheng New Zealanders, was published in 2006 for the 80th anniversary of the Zengcheng Association in Wellington. He edited the book and wrote a long historical introduction.

He was instrumental in organising "Tracking The Dragon", a cultural heritage project in Sydney that grew from the Australian Heritage Council's guide to Chinese-Australian heritage places.

In the final months of his life, Chan celebrated three things: the victory of Labor in the federal election, John Howard losing his seat, and the new Prime Minister, Kevin Rudd, speaking fluent Mandarin.


Henry Chan is survived by Mary, their son, Sebastian, daughter-in-law Kerrii Cavanagh and grandchildren Grace and Rupert.

- John Fitzgerald and Harriet Veitch
Back to top
Display posts from previous:   
Post new topic   Reply to topic    oneworldtalk Forum Index -> Peranakan, Eurasian, Diaspora and Cross Cultures All times are GMT
Page 1 of 1   

 
Jump to:  
You cannot post new topics in this forum
You cannot reply to topics in this forum
You cannot edit your posts in this forum
You cannot delete your posts in this forum
You cannot vote in polls in this forum
You cannot attach files in this forum
You cannot download files in this forum

Community Chest


Download our forum toolbar

Powered by phpBB
Hosted by FreeForums.org