Contesting Formosa: Tragic Remembrance,Urban Space,and National Identity in Taipak |
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Authors: | Scott Simon |
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Affiliation: | Department of Sociology , University of Ottawa , Ottawa, Ontario, Canada |
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Abstract: | Throughout the world, national identities are inscribed on communities through the construction of social space. Although the identity of Taiwan-as Chinese versus Formosan-has been contested for the past fifty years, the struggles over space and memory have become increasingly visible since the lifting of martial law in 1987. This article, a product of five years of field research in Taiwan, is an attempt to read some ways in which so-called Native Taiwanese have begun to inscribe a non-Chinese identity on social space in Taipak and beyond. In particular, I focus on how struggles for control over social memory have played out in the transformation of Taipak's New Park into a memorial for the Massacre of February 28. Although it is only one social field on which the struggle for Taiwanese identity is fought, New Park has become one of the major points of contention between ethnic groups on the island. |
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Keywords: | Nationalism Social Memory Ethnicity Identity Taiwan |
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