Popular Culture in Taiwan

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betel
Betel Nut
Betel Nut Chewing
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Category=JB
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Category=JHB
Category=JHMC
Chen Yingzhen
chewing
Classical Chinese Poetry
cultural hybridity studies
East Asian modernity
english
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Han Taiwanese
High Speed Rail
HSR Station
Huang Chunming
hybridisation in Taiwanese popular culture
ICRT
indigenous cultural influences
iwabuchi
koichi
language
localisation processes
Lu Xun
Mao Zedong
Maoist Literature
Native Soil Literature
Nativist Literature
nut
people
Pop Music Culture
Potter Series
radio
Real Girl
Taiwan Baseball
Taiwan's Popular Culture
taiwanese
Taiwanese identity politics
Taiwan’s Popular Culture
Tang Poetry
transnational media flows
Vice Versa
Wen Masculinity
Western Pop Music
Wu Masculinity
Young Men

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415855099
  • Weight: 317g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 04 Mar 2014
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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The growing field of popular culture studies in Taiwan can be divided into two distinct academic trends; a different analytical framework is used to examine either locally oriented popular culture or transnational pop culture. This volume combine these two academic trends, firstly by revealing that localized popular culture in Taiwan is in many ways a merging of Chinese, Japanese, American, and indigenous cultures and therefore is a form of hybridity that arose long before the term became popular. Secondly, the chapters show that the transnational character of Taiwan’s pop culture is one of the more important ways that it distinguishes itself from mainland China. In other words, it is precisely Taiwan’s transnational hybrid character that helps to define it as a distinctive local space.

The contributors explore how traditional Chinese influences modern localized lives in Taiwan, localized identity, culture, and politics as a contested domain with Chinese and traditional Taiwanese identities and Taiwan’s localization process as contesting Taiwan’s gravitation towards globalized Western culture.

Including chapters on baseball, poetry, puppets and Harry Potter, Popular Culture in Taiwan is an accessible and stimulating read for those studying the culture and society of Taiwan and China as well as cultural studies more generally.

Marc L. Moskowitz is an Associate Professor in the Department of Anthropology at the University of South Carolina and the Visual Anthropology Review Editor for the American Anthropologist.