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Culture Politics and Linguistic Recognition in Taiwan - Ethnicity, National Identity, and the Party System (Paperback)
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Culture Politics and Linguistic Recognition in Taiwan - Ethnicity, National Identity, and the Party System (Paperback)
Series: Routledge Research on Taiwan Series
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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The consolidation of Taiwanese identity in recent years has been
accompanied by two interrelated paradoxes: a continued language
shift from local Taiwanese languages to Mandarin Chinese, and the
increasing subordination of the Hoklo majority culture in ethnic
policy and public identity discourses. A number of initiatives have
been undertaken toward the revitalization and recognition of
minority cultures. At the same time, however, the Hoklo majority
culture has become akin to a political taboo. This book examines
how the interplay of ethnicity, national identity and party
politics has shaped current debates on national culture and
linguistic recognition in Taiwan. It suggests that the
ethnolinguistic distribution of the electorate has led parties to
adopt distinctive strategies in an attempt to broaden their ethnic
support bases. On the one hand, the DPP and the KMT have strived to
play down their respective de-Sinicization and Sinicization
ideologies, as well as their Hoklo and Chinese ethnocultural cores.
At the same time, the parties have competed to portray themselves
as the legitimate protectors of minority interests by promoting
Hakka and Aboriginal cultures. These concomitant logics have
discouraged parties from appealing to ethnonationalist rhetoric,
prompting them to express their antagonistic ideologies of
Taiwanese and Chinese nationalism through more liberal conceptions
of language rights. Therefore, the book argues that constraints to
cultural and linguistic recognition in Taiwan are shaped by
political rather than cultural and sociolinguistic factors.
Investigating Taiwan's counterintuitive ethnolinguistic situation,
this book makes an important theoretical contribution to the
literature to many fields of study and will appeal to scholars of
Taiwanese politics, sociolinguistics, culture and history.
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