ABSTRACT

Taiwan: Manipulation of Ideology and Struggle for Identity chronicles the turbulent relationship between Taiwan and China. This collection of essays aims to provide a critical analysis of the discourses surrounding the identity of Taiwan, its relationship with China, and global debates about Taiwan’s situation. Each chapter explores a unique aspect of Taiwan’s situation, fundamentally exploring how identity is framed in not only Taiwanese ideology, but in relation to the rest of the world. Focusing on how language is a means to maintaining a discourse of control, Taiwan: Manipulation of Ideology and Struggle for Identity delves into how Taiwan is determining its own sense of identity and language in the 21st century.

This book targets researchers and students in discourse analysis, Taiwan studies, Chinese studies, and other subjects in social sciences and political science, as well as intellectuals in the public sphere all over the globe who are interested in the Taiwan issue.

chapter

Introduction

The Truman Show continues, en masse

chapter 2|18 pages

Remembered Chinese-ness and its dynamics

Analysing the national-remembering in Taiwan after 1949

chapter 3|19 pages

Recentring the national self

The trajectory of national selfhood in Social Studies education

chapter 4|20 pages

Emerging Taiwanese identity, endangered Taiwanese language

The never-matched national identity and language in Taiwan

chapter 8|17 pages

Identity/ideology matters in cross-Strait translation

A case of Mandarin Chinese versions of Peter Hessler’s River Town 1

chapter 10|20 pages

Manoeuvring in the linguistic borderland

Southeast Asian migrant women’s language strategies in Taiwan