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Kamis, 12 Juli 2018

Jook Sing or not - YouTube
src: i.ytimg.com

Jook-sing or zuk-sing (??) is a Cantonese term for an overseas Chinese person who was born in a Western environment and/or a Chinese person who more readily or strongly identifies with Western culture than traditional Chinese culture.


Video Jook-sing



Etymology

The term jook-sing evolved from zuk-gong (??; zhugang in Mandarin) which means a "bamboo pole" or "rod". Since gong (?) is a Cantonese homophone of the inauspicious word ? which means "descend" or "downward", it is replaced with sing (?), which means "ascend" or "upward".

The stem of the bamboo plant is hollow and compartmentalized; thus water poured in one end does not flow out of the other end. The metaphor is that jook-sings are not part of either culture; water within the jook-sing does not flow and connect to either end. The term may or may not be derogatory. Use of the term predates World War II.


Maps Jook-sing



Modern term

North American usage

In the United States and Canada, the term is pejorative and refers to fully Westernized American-born or Canadian-born Chinese. The term originates from Cantonese slang in the United States. Jook-sing persons are categorized as having Western-centric identities, values and culture. The term also refers to similar Chinese individuals in Australia, Malaysia, Singapore, and New Zealand.

Related colloquialisms

  • Banana (Chinese: ???/???; pinyin: xi?ngji?o rén / xi?ngji?o zi; Jyutping: hoeng1 ziu1 jan4/hoeng1 ziu1 zi2) (referencing the yellow skin and white insides of the fruit when fully matured) and Twinkie (based on the snack produced by American company Hostess - again, it denotes something that is "yellow" on the outside and "white" on the inside); may be used as a pejorative term or as a non-pejorative term.
  • FOB (Fresh Off the Boat): antonym of jook-sing

Harrison Cafe Will Be Reborn as Jook Sing Cafe on May 7 - Eater Boston
src: cdn.vox-cdn.com


See also

  • Overseas Chinese: American Chinese, British Chinese, Chinese Canadian, Chinese Australian, Chinese New Zealander
  • American-born Chinese
  • Jook-sing noodles
  • Third culture kid

The Fascinating Craft Behind China's Rarest Noodles
src: cdn.theculturetrip.com


References


Meet one of Hong Kong's last noodle masters who uses bamboo | CNN ...
src: cdn.cnn.com


Bibliography

  • Emma Woo Louie, Chinese American Names, McFarland & Company, 1998, ISBN 0-7864-0418-3
  • Douglas W Lee, Chinese American history and historiography: The musings of a Jook-Sing, 1980.

Chill On Park - Eater Boston
src: cdn.vox-cdn.com


External links

  • Pilgrimage to China by Beth Boswell Jacks
  • Strained Relations by Julie D. Soo

Source of article : Wikipedia