1st Edition

Taiwanese Identity in the 21st Century Domestic, Regional and Global Perspectives

Edited By Gunter Schubert, Jens Damm Copyright 2012
    304 Pages 9 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    304 Pages 9 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    As we look to enter the second decade of the 21st century, Taiwan’s quest for identity remains the most contentious issue in the domestic arena of Taiwanese politics. From here, it spills over into the cross-Strait relationship and impacts on regional and global security. Whether Taiwan is a nation state or whether Taiwan has any claim to be a nation-state and how Taiwan should relate to "China" are issues which have long been hotly debated on the island, although it seems that much of this debate is now more focused on finding an adequate strategy to deal with the Beijing government than on the legitimacy of Taiwan’s claim to sovereignty as the Republic of China.

    The collection of chapters in this book shed light on very different aspects of Taiwan’s current state of identity formation from historical, political, social and economic perspectives, both domestically, and globally. As such it will be invaluable reading for students and scholars of Taiwan studies, politics, history and society, as well as those interested in cross-Strait relations, Chinese politics, and Chinese international relations.

     

    Introduction, Gunter Schubert and Jens Damm  Part I: Domestic Perspectives  1. Legacies of Memory and Belonging in Taiwan History, Ann Heylen  2. Perspectives on 228: The "28 February 1947 Uprising" in Contemporary Taiwan, Stefan Fleischauer  3. The Evolution of the KMT’s Stance on the One-China Principle: National Identity in Flux, Wu Yu-shan  4. How to Face an Embracing China? The DPP’s Identity Politics and Cross-Strait Relations During and After the Chen Shui-bian Era, Gunter Schubert and Stefan Braig  5. More or Less Space for Identity in Taiwan’s Party Politics? Dafydd Fell  6. Taiwan’s Mainlanders under President Chen Shui-bian: A Shift from the Political to the Cultural? Stéphane Corcuff  Part II: Regional and Global Perspectives  7. Navigating between China and the United States: Taiwan’s Politics of Identity, Chu Yun-han  8. Understanding Integration and "Spill Over" Across the Taiwan Strait: Towards an Analytical Framework, Keng Shu  9. Taiwanese Nationalism and Cross-Strait Marriage – Governing and Incorporating Mainland Spouses, Winnie King  10. Future of Cross-Strait Relations from an International Legal Perspective, Joseph Lee  11. From "Overseas Chinese" to "Overseas Taiwanese": Questions of Identity and Belonging, Jens Damm  12 Taiwan as East Asia in Formation: A Subaltern Appropriation of the Colonial Narratives, Shih Chih-yu  13. Identity Formation in Taiwan and Hong Kong – How Much Difference, How Many Similarities? Malte Kaeding

    Biography

    Jens Damm is an Assistant Professor, currently affiliated to the Graduate Institute of Taiwan Studies, Chang Jung University, Tainan. He is also an Associate Fellow at the European Research Center on Contemporary Taiwan (ERCCT) at Tuebingen University and a board member of the European Association of Taiwan Studies (EATS). His research is mainly focused on discourses on gender and ethnicity-related issues in Taiwan, Greater China including the PRC, and on the impact of new communication technologies. He is the author of Homosexuality and Society in Taiwan: 1945 to 1995 (2003) and has edited Chinese Cyberspaces (Routledge 2006, co-edited with Simona Thomas), Postmodern China (LIT 2008, co-edited with Andreas Steen), Taiwanese Identity from Domestic, Regional and Global Perspectives (LIT 2007, co-edited with Gunter Schubert), and China Networks (LIT 2009, co-edited with Mechthild Leutner).

    Gunter Schubert is Professor of Greater China Studies at the Institute of Asian and Oriental Studies, University of Tuebingen. He is also the Director of the Tuebingen-based European Research Center on Contemporary Taiwan (ERCCT). Professor Schubert specializes in the politics and society of the Greater China region, cross-Strait relations and integration, and local governance reform in the PRC. He has also published on human rights development in East Asia and Chinese nationalism. His most recent book publications are Politische Partizipation und Regimelegitimität in der VR China: Der ländliche Raum (Political participation and regime legitimacy in the PRC: rural China) (VS Verlag 2009, co-written with Thomas Heberer) and Regime Legitimacy in Contemporary China: Institutional Change and Stability (Routledge 2009, co-edited with Thomas Heberer).