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Based on extensive field research over a period of twenty years,
this is the first comprehensive study of the Puyuma people of
Taiwan. The Puyuma belong to the Austronesian peoples, which today
number less than 370,000. In Taiwan, they are the least known of
the aboriginal groups, numbering only 6000, and inhabiting the
Southeastern province of Taitung. The study looks at the historical
changes in the status and definition of these people in relation to
the central state, the criteria by which people determine their own
ethnic identity, and the evolution of that identity through
history. The increasing awareness in the West of the importance of
ethnic relations makes this an especially timely book.
The first comprehensive study of the Puyuma people of Taiwan, this book is based on extensive field research over a period of twenty years. The Puyuma belong to the Austronesian peoples, which today number less than 370,000. In Taiwan, they are the least known of the aboriginal groups, numbering only 6000, and inhabiting the Southeastern province of Taitung. The study looks at the historical changes in the status and definition of these people in relation to the central state, the criteria by which people determine their own ethnic identity, and the evolution of that identity through history. The increasing awareness in the West of the importance of ethnic relations makes this an especially timely book.
This book opens with an examination of values themselves, grappling
with western assertions of individual human rights and the eastern
emphasis on duties, and analysing selected Asian philosophical and
religious traditions. Several case studies follow, on countries the
Philippines, Japan, China, Malaysia and Thailand. The purpose of
the book is to help westerners in particular to understand and
appreciate better the changes taking place in Asia, to handle
relations more sensitively, and thereby to help bring Europe and
Asia together.
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