ABSTRACT
This volume presents a comparative analysis of three key cities—Hong Kong, Singapore, and Taipei—during the Cold War. Strategically positioned within international trade networks, these cities also served as critical nodes for both regional conflicts and cooperation. The comparison primarily focuses on their urban landscapes, drawing on the memories embedded in their collective memoryscapes, the imagery presented in their filmscapes, and the perceptions of their inhabitants, as reflected in fiction and films that portrayed urban life and the experiences of ordinary people. The Cityscapes of Taipei, Hong Kong, and Singapore during the Cold War explores both the shared characteristics of these cities as frontiers in the bipolar global system (divided between Communism and the Free World) and their distinctive features as unique spaces shaped by their own meanings and opportunities.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
part 1|124 pages
Taipei
chapter 1|19 pages
Building a Transnational Anticommunist Network: The Operation and Implications of the USIS Presence in Taipei
chapter 3|31 pages
The Frontier Behind the Curtain: Contextualizing Eileen Chang's “A Return to the Frontier”
chapter 5|30 pages
Islamic Enclaves in Taipei and Transnational Entanglements during the Cold War
part 2|97 pages
Hong Kong
chapter 6|18 pages
The Heart of the Berlin of the East: Victoria Park, Queen's College, and Causeway Bay in Cold War Hong Kong
chapter 8|23 pages
A Model Market Town on the Cold War Frontier: Luen Wo Market in the New Territories, 1947–79
chapter 9|25 pages
The Future Takes Wing: Kai Tak Airport and the Repositioning of Hong Kong, 1958-78
part 3|91 pages
Singapore
