Aktuelle Publikationen

Liberating Architecture from ‘Chineseness’: Colonial Shinto Shrines and Post-colonial Martyrs’ Shrines in Post-war Taiwan

Autor(en)
Liza Wing Man Kam
Abstrakt

This chapter probes into the concept of “Chineseness” in architecture. It investigates how the so-called Chinese design elements could be hidden, disguised, magnified, and appropriated in facilitating different identification processes in Taiwan since the Japanese colonial era. It discusses two forms of renditions: colonial Shinto shrines and post-colonial Martyrs’ shrines, in which the hidden and proclaimed “Chinese” design elements that the Japanese and Kuomingtang authorities attempted to essentialize and negotiate, respectively, for their own convenience to rule. Drawn upon the theoretical dictum of diasporic paradigm to consider “Chineseness” as category with non-fixed content in “racial, cultural or geographical terms which operates as an open and indeterminate signifier” (Ang 1998, p. 225), “Chineseness” as a concept, or China, Chinese as attributions—subliming from its geopolitical suggestion—should merely serve as temporal references, which describe collection of dynamic cultural stop-overs with its intellectual trajectories, rather than being fixed and timeless. Akin to any other attribution in front of that “–ness,” ‘Chineseness’ is relevant only when it is liberated from the modern geopolitical and national boundaries in its individually contextualized situations in cultural sense.

Organisation(en)
Institut für Ostasienwissenschaften
Externe Organisation(en)
Georg-August-Universität Göttingen, Max-Planck-Institut zur Erforschung multireligiöser und multiethnischer Gesellschaften
Seiten
59-81
Anzahl der Seiten
22
Publikationsdatum
03-2021
Peer-reviewed
Ja
ÖFOS 2012
604002 Architektonische Gestaltung, 201201 Architekturgeschichte, 601022 Zeitgeschichte, 605008 Kulturerbe
Schlagwörter
Link zum Portal
https://ucrisportal.univie.ac.at/de/publications/195a3f35-b7b2-4bef-bb29-354fde90b6fc