
New Books Network Alvin K. Wong, "Unruly Comparison: Queerness, Hong Kong, and the Sinophone" (Duke UP, 2025)
Jan 13, 2026
In this discussion, Alvin K. Wong, a comparative literature scholar and chair of the Society of Sinophone Studies, delves into his groundbreaking work on queerness in Hong Kong. He challenges traditional comparative methodologies, proposing the concept of 'unruly comparison' to explore transnational queer solidarities. Wong examines the influence of Hong Kong's cultural landscape through various media, including cinema and visual art, while connecting queer narratives to broader social movements and historical contexts.
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Use The Sinophone Frame
- Use the Sinophone framework to unsettle nationalist assumptions in area studies.
- Alvin advises comparing across Sinitic language communities to reveal non-national articulations of Chineseness.
Hong Kong As Method
- Hong Kong functions as a methodological site that unsettles China-centrism and colonial framings.
- Alvin K. Wong argues this unruly position enables transnational, incommensurable comparisons across the Sinophone.
Unruly Visions Exhibition Visit
- Alvin describes visiting the Unruly Visions exhibition in January 2021 and seeing trans and protest-inflected artworks.
- He recounts two photos that linked queer visuality to 2019 protests and reframed protest imagery through queer witnesses.

