ABSTRACT

Taiwan has often been characterised as an isolated society in its search for sovereignty and security. Its contact with the world in an era of globalization and post-modernity, however, has increasingly led to Taiwanese actors successfully participating in many regional and global fields.

In this book an international team of scholars presents cases studies and theoretical debates emphasising agency in coping with the effects of globalisation. In so doing, they contest the image of Taiwan’s marginalization and seek to understand it in terms of its connectedness, whether globally, regionally or trans-nationally. Taking a multi-disciplinary, comparative approach, it covers themes such as markets and trading, diplomacy and nation-branding, collective action, media, film and literature, and religious mission. It thus combines perspectives from several disciplines including media studies, sociology, political science, and studies in religion.

Using Taiwan as an example of how to conceptualise connectivity and think differently about comparative studies, this book will be useful for students and scholars of Asian Politics and Cultural Studies, as well as of Taiwan Studies more specifically.

chapter 1|7 pages

Introduction

chapter 2|31 pages

Framing connectivity

Concepts and the case of Taiwan

part I|58 pages

Institutions

chapter 3|20 pages

Politics of repositioning and state spatiality

From ‘Xiangtu China’ to ‘Oceanic Taiwan’

chapter 4|13 pages

The Taiwan–EU economic relationship

A channel for greater assertiveness?

chapter 5|23 pages

Science communication in Taiwan

Rethinking the local and global

part II|70 pages

Individuals and groups

part III|57 pages

Ideas

chapter 9|20 pages

Exporting values or exoticizing?

Lee Ang and global cinema

chapter 10|19 pages

The literary island

Isolation and integration as key elements in reading Taiwan literature 1