Faculty of Arts


Chinese

Asian New Zealanders

237, 459 Asian New Zealanders (2001 NZ Census)
Diverse ethnic groups

  • Chinese 100, 203
  • Indian 59,823
  • Korean 19,026
  • Filipino 11,091
  • Japanese 10,002



Chinese New Zealanders

Time of arrival

Place of origin


Early Chinese, circa 1860, in search of a better life:

I was born in a village in P’oon Yu county. My father was a gold-miner in Otago…I came out to NZ to join my father in 1914 after he gave up mining and opened a fruit shop in Palmerston North. My father never accomplished his goal of becoming rich, and he died an old man in 1946.I have not been back to China since a short visit in 1935, the only visit I had made since 1914. Due to a shortage of available women and a shortage of money, I never married and have no sons. This bothers me. What a mess the world is in.…I am totally against it [intermarriage]. I could have married a European or Maori, but I wouldn’t. It’s disgraceful all this intermarriage. ….I am not happy about that [changing customs] either. Chinese should remember their past with pride (Greif 1974)

Jenny -3rd generation Chinese New Zealander

I was born in Wellington, where I work as a secretary in a solicitor’s firm. I earn good money…My parents…want me married. …I want to be choosy, because I don’t want to end up old before my time working sixty hours a week in a fruit shop, like my mother helping my father. I want to marry somebody like my boss…You should see his car..and his home. ….I am going to limit myself to Chinese blokes only. It would kill them if I ran off with a Europeans… [My Chinese] is not too good. We only use it to talk to real old people and not even then sometimes. My father can read and he says that I am losing a lot, not knowing much about Chinese and Chinese culture. But I can cook. Everyone says what a good cook I am.

History

From Guangdong

Spoke 3 varieties of Cantonese

not well-educated

immensely proud of their language and culture


Studies of Language Maintenance

Roberts, Mary. 1991. The New Zelaand-born Chinese community of Wellington: aspects of language maintenance and shift. In Holmes & Harlow (eds) Threads in the Tapestry of Language.Auckland Linguistics Society.

Sun, Susan. 1999. The New Zealand-born Chinese Community of Auckland. Hong Kong Journal of Applied Linguistics 7: 99-106


Factors that attributed to inter-generational transfer

Regular social interaction

spoke language at home

positive attitudes towards the language

strong association between language and culture

residential contiguity

community language schools


Roberts…signs of shift

Slow language shift

Literacy all but dead

Language not a core value

Language shift from childhood to current home

Language use (parents..Cantonese/children..English)


Factors of Relevance

Age

Gender

Childhood language use

Attendance at language schools


Positive Attitudes

Identity

Chinese New Zealanders

Essential part of cultural identity


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