CHIN30002-无代写
时间:2023-06-08
Second Essay Questions
(Long version with Reading List)
Taiwan and Beyond: Chinese Settler Cultures CHIN30002
(June 2023)
Due Date: 11.59 pm, June 14, 2023, via the Taiwan and Beyond LMS Canvas site. (Note the
changed date)
Instructions:
• Choose one question from the list of thirteen below and write an essay of 2000 words
(can be a maximum 10% over or under this word limit).
• You must use at least 5 of the sources from the reading list provided below your
chosen question in the long version of the essay questions. Any additional sources
from outside this list must be first approved by either the tutor or the lecturer for the
subject (by email).
• Referencing: You can use any one of the major styles for citation (APA, Chicago,
MLA or Harvard). Note the next instruction in this list…
• Whichever referencing style you use, exact page numbers must be given for
citations throughout the essay (whether in-text or footnotes).
• A bibliography or reference list giving full details of all works cited must be included
at the end of the essay.
• Extensions & late penalties: please refer to the subject guide, faculty penalties of
10% per day apply to all essays that are submitted late without an approved extension.
• Please read the Essay Tips and Checklist handout before submitting your essay.
• You may choose to refer to the People’s Republic of China (PRC) as either the
People’s Republic of China (PRC), or China, or Mainland China. For this essay, these
options are all acceptable.
• Consultation times will be available using Zoom. Please check the Announcements
for times and sign-up arrangements.
2
1. Was conflict between the people of Taiwan and the incoming KMT regime between
1945 and 1947 the result of incompatibility between the two groups, or was it more
due to the failures of KMT policy? (If you believe that the two groups were
incompatible, outline the nature of the incompatibility; if you think it was due to
KMT policy failures, specify what these policy failures were.)
Chiou, C.L. “The Uprising of 28 February 1947 on Taiwan: The Official 1992 Investigation
Report” China Information 7/4 (1993): 1-19.
Chu Yun-han and Jih-wen Lin. “Political Development in 20th Century Taiwan: State-
Building, Regime Transformation and the Construction of National Identity” The China
Quarterly 165 (2001): 102-129.
Edmondson, Robert. “The February 28 Incident and National Identity” in Stephane Corcuff,
(ed.) Memories of the Future: National Identity Issues and the Search for a New Taiwan.
Armonk, N.Y.; London: M.E. Sharpe, 2002: 25-46. UniM Bail 951.24904 MEMO & UniM
INTERNET resource.
Fleischauer, Stefan. “The 228 Incident and the Taiwan Independence Movement’s
Construction of a Taiwanese Identity” China Information 21, no.3 (2007): 373-401.
Gold, Thomas B. “Retrocession and Authoritarian KMT Rule (1945-1986)” in Gunter
Schubert (ed.), Routledge Handbook of Contemporary Taiwan. London: Routledge, 2016: 36-
50. UniM INTERNET resource.
Hillenbrand, Margaret “Trauma and the Politics of Identity: Form and Function in Narratives
of the February 28th Incident” Modern Chinese Literature and Culture 17, no.2 (2005): 49-8.
Kerr, George H. Formosa Betrayed, New York: Da Capo Press, 1976, 1965. UniM Bail High
Use 951.24905 KERR OVERNIGHT LOAN (MISSING)
Lai, Tse-han; Myers, Ramon Hawley; Wei O. A Tragic Beginning: The Taiwan Uprising of
February 28, 1947, Stanford: Stanford UP, 1991. UniM Bail 951.24905 LAI
Louzon, Victor “From Japanese Soldiers to Chinese Rebels: Colonial Hegemony, War
Experience, and Spontaneous Remobilization during the 1947 Taiwanese Rebellion” The
Journal of Asian Studies 77, no. 1 (2018): 161–179.
Mendel, Douglas Heusted. The Politics of Formosan Nationalism, Berkeley: University of
California Press, 1970. UniM Bail 320.951249 M537
Phillips, Steven E. “Between Assimilation and Independence: Taiwanese Political
Aspirations under Nationalist Chinese Rule, 1945-1948” in Murray A. Rubinstein (ed.)
Taiwan: A New History (Revised edn) Armonk, New York: M.E.Sharpe, 2007: 275-319.
UniM INTERNET resource.
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Phillips, Steven E. Between Assimilation and Independence: The Taiwanese Encounter
Nationalist China, 1945-1950 Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press, 2003. UniM Bail
High Use 951.24905 PHIL OVERNIGHT LOAN (MISSING)
2. Was the development of Taiwan by the KMT between 1949 and the 1970s the result
of a genuine interest in improving life for Taiwan’s people or was it simply a by-
product of their conflict with the CCP and their attempt to retake the Chinese
mainland?
Bullard, Monte R. The Soldier and the Citizen: The Role of the Military in Taiwan's
Development, Armonk, N.Y.: M.E. Sharpe, 1997. UniM Bail 322.50951249 BULL
Chu Yun-han; Lin, Jih-wen. “Political Development in 20th Century Taiwan: State-Building,
Regime Transformation and the Construction of National Identity” The China Quarterly, no.
165, March 2001: 102-129.
Clark, Cal. “The Taiwan Exception: Implications for Contending Political Economy
Paradigms” International Studies Quarterly 31, no. 3 (1987): 327-356.
Clark, Cal; Tan, Alexander C.; Ho, Karl. “Confronting the Costs of its Past Success:
Revisiting Taiwan’s Post-authoritarian Political and Economic Development” Asian Politics
& Policy, 10, no. 3 (2018): 460–484.
Clough, Ralph. “Taiwan under Nationalist rule, 1949-1982” in MacFarquhar, Roderick and
John K. Fairbank (ed.), The Cambridge History of China: volume 15: The People's Republic,
part 2: Revolutions within the Chinese Revolution 1966-1982, Cambridge and New York:
Cambridge UP, 1991. (available as an on-line resource via library catalogue).
Dickson, Bruce J. “The Lessons of Defeat: The Reorganization of the Kuomintang on Taiwan,
1950-52” China Quarterly 133 (1993): 56–84.
Gold, Thomas B. State and Society in the Taiwan Miracle, Armonk, N.Y.: M.E. Sharpe, 1986.
UniM Giblin Eunson 338.951249 GOLD SEVEN DAY LOAN
Ho, Min-sho. “The Rise and Fall of Leninist Control in Taiwan’s Industry” China Quarterly
189 (2007): 162-179.
Ho, Ming-sho “Beyond Tokenism: The Institutional Conversion of Party-Controlled Labour
Unions in Taiwan’s State-Owned Enterprises (1951-86)” China Quarterly 212 (2012):1019-
1039.
Ho, Ming-sho “Manufacturing Loyalty: The Political Mobilization of Labor in Taiwan, 1950-
1986 “ Modern China 36, no.6 (2010): 559-588.
Ho, Samuel P. S. (1978). Economic Development of Taiwan, 1860–1970. New Haven: Yale
University Press. UniM Giblin Eunson 330.951249 HO
4
Hsiung, James C. et al (eds). The Taiwan Experience, 1950-1980: Contemporary Republic of
China, New York: Praeger, 1981.UniM Bail 951.24905 TAIW
Hung, Lu-Hsun; Mo, Ta-Hua; Tuan, Fu-Chu. “The Evolution of the ROC’s Military-Societal
Relations: From Militarized Society to Socialized Military” in Edmonds, Martin and Tsai,
Michael M. (eds) Defending Taiwan: The Future Vision of Taiwan's Defence Policy and
Military Strategy. London; New York: Routledge Curzon, 2003:177-208. UniM INTERNET
resource.
Ku, Yeun-wen. Welfare Capitalism in Taiwan: State, Economy and Social Policy,
Houndmills, Hampshire: Macmillan Press; New York: St. Martin’s Press, 1997. UniM Bail
361.610951249 KU
Myers, Ramon H. “Towards An Enlightened Authoritarian Polity: The Kuomintang Central
Reform Committee on Taiwan, 1950-1952” Journal of Contemporary China 18, no.59.
(2009):185-199.
Ngo, Tak-Wing; Chen, Yi-Chi. “The Genesis of Responsible Government under
Authoritarian Conditions: Taiwan During Martial Law” China Review: An Interdisciplinary
Journal on Greater China 8, no.2 (2008): 15-48.
Rubinstein, Murray A. (ed.). The Other Taiwan: 1945 to the Present, Armonk, N.Y.: M.E.
Sharpe, 1994. UniM Bail 951.24905 OTHE
Skoggard, Ian A. The Indigenous Dynamic in Taiwan’s Postwar Development: The Religious
and Historical Roots of Entrepreneurship, Armonk, N.Y.: M.E. Sharpe, 1996. UniM Bail
951.24905 SKOG
Tien, Hung-mao. The Great Transition: Political and Social Change in the Republic of China,
Stanford: Hoover Institution Press, 1989. UniM Bail 951.24905 TIEN
Tsang, Steve (ed.). In the Shadow of China: Political Developments in Taiwan Since 1949,
Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press, 1993. UniM Bail 320.951249 INTH
Wang, Peter Chen-main. “A Bastion Created, a Regime Reformed, an Economy
Reengineered, 1949-1970” in Rubinstein, Murray A. (ed.) Taiwan: A New History Armonk,
New York: M.E.Sharpe, 2007: 320-338. UniM UniM INTERNET resource.
Wong, Joseph. “The Developmental State and Taiwan: Origins and Adaption” in Schubert,
Gunter (ed.) Routledge Handbook of Contemporary Taiwan. London: Routledge, 2016: 201-
217. UniM INTERNET resource.
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3. Between the 1940s and the 1970s the KMT wanted to restructure Taiwan culture to
make Taiwan into a model of what a non-Communist Chinese society would look
like – do you think that they were successful in changing Taiwan culture, seen in the
widespread acceptance of Mandarin as a language of communication, or did their
authoritarian approach to Taiwan culture produce resentment, so that Taiwan people
came eventually to reject the idea that they were Chinese and emphasise their
Taiwanese identity instead?
Chang, Bi-Yu. “So Close, Yet So Far Away: Imaging Chinese ‘Homeland’ in Taiwan’s
Geography Education” (1945-68)” Cultural Geographies, 18 no. 3 (2010): 385-411.
Chang, Bi-yu. Place, Identity, and National Imagination in Post-War Taiwan. London; New
York, New York: Routledge, 2015. UniM INTERNET resource.
Chang, Hui-ching; Holt, Murray A. ‘Symbols in Conflict: Taiwan (Taiwan) and Zhongguo
(China) in Taiwan’s Identity Politics’, Nationalism and Nationalism and Ethnic Politics 13 1.
2007: 134–9. (week 11 reading)
Chang, Hui-ching; Holt, Richard. Language, Politics and Identity in Taiwan: Naming China,
Oxfordshire, England; New York: Routledge, 2015. UniM INTERNET resource
Chun, Allen. “From Nationalism to Nationalizing: Cultural Imagination and State Formation
in Postwar Taiwan” Australian Journal of Chinese Affairs, 31 (Jan 1994): 49-69.
Diamond, Norma. “Women under the Kuomintang Rule—Variations on the Feminine
Mystique” Modern China, 1 no. 1 (1975): 3-45.
Guy, Nancy. Peking Opera and Politics in Taiwan. Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 2005.
UniM Southbank 306.484095115 GUY
Harrell, Stevan; Huang, Chün-chieh (eds). Cultural Change in Postwar Taiwan. Boulder:
Westview Press, 1994. UniM Bail 951.24905 CULT
Hsiau, A-chin. Contemporary Taiwanese Cultural Nationalism. London; New York:
Routledge, 2000. UniM Bail 320.540951249 HSIA
Klöter, Henning. “Language Policy in the KMT and DPP Eras” China Perspectives, 56
(2004): 56-63.
Lee, Hwa-Wei. Educational Development in Taiwan under the Nationalist Government,
1945-1962, Ann Arbor: University Microfilms International, 1983. UniM ERC 370.951249
LEE
Liao, Wen-shuo “Exhibiting Chineseness: the Taiwan Provincial Exposition of 1948”
Twentieth-Century China 37, no.3 (2012):183-203.
6
Liu, Jennifer. “Anticipating Invasion: Military Training in Taiwan’s High Schools, 1953-
1960” Twentieth-Century China 37, no.3 (2012): 204-228.
Metzger, Thomas A. “The Chinese Reconciliation of Moral-Sacred Values With Modern
Pluralism: Political Discourse in the ROC, 1949-1989” in Myers, Ramon H. (ed.) Two
Societies in Opposition: The Republic of China and the People’s Republic of China after
Forty Years. Stanford: Hoover Institution Press, 1991: 3-56.
Myers, Ramon H. “A New Chinese Civilization: The Evolution of the Republic of China on
Taiwan” China Quarterly 148 (1996): 1072-1090.
Storm, Carsten; Harrison, Mark (eds). The Margins of Becoming: Identity and Culture in
Taiwan. Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz. 2007 UniM Bail 320.540951249 MARG
Taylor, Jeremy E. “The Production of the Chiang Kai-Shek Personality Cult, 1929-1975” The
China Quarterly 185 (2006): 96-110.
Wang, Horng-luen “National Culture and Its Discontents: The Politics of Heritage and
Language in Taiwan, 1949-2003” Comparative Studies in Society and History 46, no.4 (2004)
786-815. (Course Reading week 8)
Wilson, Richard. Learning to Be Chinese: The Political Socialization of Children in Taiwan
Cambridge: The M.I.T. Press 1970. UniM Giblin Eunson 301.157 WILS
Wu, Ping-lin. The Development of Taiwan Education from 1945 to 1962, Ann Arbor:
University Microfilms International, 1983. UniM Giblin Eunson 378.51249 WU
7
4. Who or what was responsible for Taiwan’s democratisation? Far-sighted KMT
leaders? Opposition activists? A rising middle class? Or a combination of
circumstantial factors, such as the loss of Taiwan’s status as the representative of
China at the UN? If a combination of elements was involved, which was most
important and why?
Arrigo, Linda Gail. “From Democratic Movement to Bourgeois Democracy: The Internal
Politics of the Taiwan Democratic Progressive Party in 1991” in Rubinstein, Murray A. (ed.),
The Other Taiwan: 1945 to the Present, Armonk, N.Y. and London: M.E. Sharpe, 1994. 17-
80; 145-180. UniM Bail 951.24905 OTHE
Chao, Chung-Chi; Huang, Wei-Neng. “Civility and Civil Society and Their Relationship to
Democratisation in Taiwan: A Brief Historical Examination (1949-2008)” China: An
International Journal 13, no. 1 (2015): 155–180.
Cheng, Tun-jen. “Democratizing the Quasi-Leninist Regime in Taiwan” World Politics 41 no.
4 (1989): 471-499. doi:10.2307/2010527
Chu, J.J. “Political Liberalization and the Rise of Taiwanese Labour Radicalism” Journal of
Contemporary Asia 23, no. 2. (1993): 173-188.
Chu, Yun-han; Lin, Jih-wen. “Political Development in 20th-Century Taiwan: State-Building,
Regime Transformation and the Construction of National Identity” China Quarterly 165
(2001): 102-129.
Chu, Yun-han. “Social Protests and Political Democratization in Taiwan.” in Rubinstein,
Murray A. (ed.), The Other Taiwan: 1945 to the Present, Armonk, N.Y. and London: M.E.
Sharpe, 1994. 99-113. UniM Bail 951.24905 OTHE
Clark, Cal; Tan, Alexander C.; Ho, Karl. “Confronting the Costs of its Past Success:
Revisiting Taiwan’s Post-authoritarian Political and Economic Development” Asian Politics
& Policy, 10, no. 3. (2008): 460–484.
Copper, John F. “Ending Martial Law in Taiwan: Implications and Prospects” Journal of
Northeast Asian Studies 7, no. 2 (1988): 3-19.
Copper, John F. “Taiwan: A Nation in Transition” Current History 88, no. 537 (1989): 173-
176, 198-199.
Copper, John F. “The Evolution of Political Parties in Taiwan” Asian Affairs 16, no.1 (1989):
3-21.
Copper, John Franklin. Taiwan: Nation-State Or Province? 6th edition. Boulder: Westview,
2013. UniM INTERNET resource
Davison, D.W.S. “Politics of the Left in Taiwan; An Interview.” Bulletin of Concerned Asian
Scholars 12 no. 2 (1980): 18-24.
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Fell, Dafydd. Government and Politics in Taiwan. Second Edition. Milton Park, Abingdon,
Oxon; New York: Routledge, 2018. UniM INTERNET resource
Hsiao, Hsin-Huang Michael. “Emerging Social Movements and the Rise of a Demanding
Civil Society on Taiwan,” Australian Journal of Chinese Affairs 24 (1990): 163-179.
Hu, Ching-fen. “Taiwan’s Geopolitics and Chiang Ching-Kuo’s Decision to Democratize
Taiwan” Stanford Journal of East Asian Affairs 5, no.1 (2005): 26-44.
Jacobs, J. Bruce. Democratizing Taiwan, Leiden; Boston: Brill, 2012. UniM INTERNET
resource.
Jacobs, J. Bruce. “Taiwan During and After the Democratic Transition 1988-2016” in
Schubert, Gunter (ed), Routledge Handbook of Contemporary Taiwan. London: Routledge,
2016: 51-67. UniM INTERNET resource.
Jacobs, J. Bruce. The Kaohsiung Incident in Taiwan and Memoirs of a Foreign Big Beard,
Leiden: Brill. 2016. UniM INTERNET resource
Lee, Shyu-tu; Williams Jack F. (eds). Taiwan’s Struggle: Voices of the Taiwanese. Lanham:
Rowman & Littlefield, 2014. UniM INTERNET resource
Lu, Hsiu-lien; Esarey, Ashley. My Fight for a New Taiwan: One Woman’s Journey from
Prison to Power, Seattle, Washington: University of Washington Press. 2014. UniM
INTERNET resource
Phillips, Steven. “Democracy and National Destinies on Taiwan” Nations and Nationalism
22, no. 4 (2016): 666–685.
Tien, Hung-mao; Cheng, Tun-jen. “Crafting Democratic Institutions in Taiwan” China
Journal 37 (1997): 1-30.
Tien, Hung-mao; Chu, Yun-han. “Building Democracy in Taiwan” China Quarterly 148
(1996): 1141-1170.
Tien, Hung-mao. “Taiwan’s Evolution Toward Democracy: A Historical Perspective.” in
Simon, Denis Fred and. Kau, Michael Y.M (eds), Taiwan Beyond the Economic Miracle,
Armonk, N.Y. and London: M.E. Sharpe, 1992. UniM Giblin Eunson 330.95124905 TAIW
Wachman, Alan M. “Competing Identities in Taiwan.” in Rubinstein, Murray A. (ed.), The
other Taiwan: 1945 to the present, Armonk, N.Y. and London: M.E. Sharpe. 1994: 17-80.
UniM Bail 951.24905 OTHE
Wachman, Alan. Taiwan: National Identity and Democratization, Armonk, N.Y.: M.E.
Sharpe, 1994. UniM Bail 305.800951 WACH
Winckler, Edwin A. “Elite Political Struggle, 1945-1985” in Winckler, Edwin A. and
Greenhalgh ¸Susan (eds), Contending Approaches to the Political Economy of Taiwan,
Armonk, N.Y.: M.E. Sharpe, 1988: 151-171. UniM Giblin Eunson 338.951249 CONT
9
Yang, David D. “Classing Ethnicity, Class, Ethnicity, and the Mass Politics of Taiwan’s
Democratic Transition” World Politics, 59, no. 4 (2007): 503-538.
10
5. Would Taiwanese nationalism be so strong without the electoral competition between
the DPP and the KMT? Is it accurate to see Taiwanese nationalism as something
which politicians have created (or at least fostered) in their competition for power, or
do politicians simply draw on this sentiment and seek to express it?
Achen, Christopher H.; Wang, T.Y. The Taiwan Voter, Ann Arbor University of Michigan
Press, 2017. Open Access: https://quod.lib.umich.edu/u/ump/mpub9375036
Brown, Melissa J. Is Taiwan Chinese? The Impact of Culture, Power, and Migration on
Changing Identities. Berkeley: University of California Press. 2004. UniM Bail High Use
305.89925 UniM INTERNET resource
Hsiau, A-chin. Contemporary Taiwanese Cultural Nationalism, London; New York:
Routledge, 2000. UniM Bail 320.540951249 HSIA
Balderas, Ulyses; Stockton, Hans. “Whither(ing) identity? National Identity and Partisan
Support in Presidential Elections on Taiwan 2004-2012” American Journal of Chinese
Studies, 20, no. 43 (2013): 43-60.
Chang, Yu-tzung; Lu, Jie. “Language Stereotypes in Contemporary Taiwan: Evidence from
An Experimental Study” Journal of East Asian Studies 14, no.2 (2014): 211-248.
Chao, Linda; Myers Ramon H. “The First Chinese Democracy: Political Development of the
Republic of China on Taiwan, 1986-1994” Asian Survey 34/3 (1994): 213-230.
Chao, Linda; Myers Ramon H. The First Chinese Democracy: Political Life in the Republic
of China on Taiwan, Baltimore, Md.: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1998. UniM Bail
320.951249 CHAO
Chen, E.K.Y. Chen; Williams, Jack F.; Wong, Joseph (eds). Taiwan: Economy, Society and
History, Hong Kong: Centre of Asian Studies, University of Hong Kong, 1991. UniM Bail
951.249 TAIW
Chuang, YaChung, Democracy on trial : social movements and cultural politics in
postauthoritarian Taiwan Hong Kong : The Chinese University Press, 2013 UniM
INTERNET resource
Chun, Allen. “Democracy as Hegemony, Globalization as Indigenization, Or the ‘Culture’ in
Taiwanese National Politics” Journal of Asian and African Studies 35, no.1. (2000): 7-27.
Chun, Allen “The Coming Crisis of Multiculturalism in ‘Transnational’ Taiwan” Social
Analysis 46, no.2. (2002): 102-122.
Clark, Cal. “Taiwan Enters Troubled Waters: The Elective Presidencies of Lee Teng-Hui and
Chen Shui-Bian” in Rubinstein, Murray A. (ed.), Taiwan: A New History (Revised ed).
Armonk, NY: M.E. Sharpe, 2007: 496–535. UniM INTERNET resource.
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Clark, Cal; Tan, Alexander C.; Ho, Karl. “Confronting the Costs of its Past Success:
Revisiting Taiwan’s Post-authoritarian Political and Economic Development” Asian Politics
& Policy, 10, no. 3 (2018): 460–484.
Copper, John F. Consolidating Taiwan’s Democracy Lanham, Md.: University Press of
America, 2005. UniM Bail High Use 951.24905 COPP OVERNIGHT LOAN
Copper. John F. (ed.) Taiwan in troubled time: essays on the Chen Shui-bian presidency
River Edge, N.J. : World Scientific, 2002. UniM INTERNET resource
Fell, Dafydd. Party Politics in Taiwan: Party Change and the Democratic Evolution of
Taiwan, 1991–2004. London: Routledge, 2005. UniM INTERNET resource
Fell, Dafydd. Government and Politics in Taiwan. Second Edition. Milton Park, Abingdon,
Oxon; New York: Routledge, 2018. UniM INTERNET resource
Fulda, Andreas Martin. “Reevaluating the Taiwanese Democracy Movement: A Comparative
Analysis of Opposition Organizations under Japanese and KMT Rule” Critical Asian Studies
34, no.3 (2002): 357-394.
Hughes, Christopher R. Taiwan and Chinese Nationalism: National Identity and Status in
International Society, London and New York: Routledge, 1997. UniM Bail 951.05 HUGH.
Hughes, Christopher R. “National Identity” in Gunter Schubert (ed), Routledge Handbook of
Contemporary Taiwan. London: Routledge, 2016: 153-168. UniM INTERNET resource.
Jacobs, J. Bruce. “‘Taiwanization’ in Taiwan’s Politics” in Makeham, J. and Hsiau, A-C.
(eds) Cultural, Ethnic, and Political Nationalism in Contemporary Taiwan: Bentuhua, New
York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2005: 7–54. UniM INTERNET resource.
Jacobs, J. Bruce. Democratizing Taiwan. Leiden; Boston: Brill, 2012. UniM INTERNET
resource.
Liao, Chao-Chih. “Changing Dominant Language Use and Ethnic Equality in Taiwan Since
1987” international Journal of the Sociology of Language 143 (2000): 165-182.
Makeham, John; Hsiau, A-chin (eds). Cultural, Ethnic, and Political Nationalism in
Contemporary Taiwan: Bentuhua. New York: Palgrave Macmillan. 2005. UniM INTERNET
resource.
Martin, Brian G. “The Relationship Between the Kuomintang and the Military in Taiwan” in
Klintworth, Gary (ed.), Modern Taiwan in the 1990s, Canberra: Strategic and Defence
Studies Centre, Australian National University, 1991: 23-38.
Mendel, Douglas. The Politics of Formosan Nationalism. Berkeley: University of California
Press, 1970. UniM Bail 320.951249 MEND
Rich, Timothy S. and Jonathan Sullivan. “Elections” in Gunter Schubert (ed), Routledge
Handbook of Contemporary Taiwan. London: Routledge, 2016: 119-137. UniM INTERNET
resource.
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Rigger, Shelley. From Opposition to Power: Taiwan’s Democratic Progressive Party.
Boulder: L. Rienner Publishers, 2001. UniM Bail 324.25124906 RIGG
Rigger, Shelley. Politics in Taiwan: Voting for Democracy, London: Routledge, 1999. UniM
Bail 320.951249 RIGG
Rigger, Shelley. “Kuomintang Agonistes: Party Politics in the Wake of Taiwan’s 2016
Elections” Orbis: A Journal of World Affairs 60, no. 4 (2016): 488–503.
Rubinstein, Murray A. (ed.), The Other Taiwan: 1945 to the Present, Armonk, N.Y.: M.E.
Sharpe, 1994. UniM Bail 951.24905 OTHE
Taylor, Jay. The Generalissimo’s son: Chiang Ching-kuo and the Revolutions in China and
Taiwan. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 2000. UniM Bail 951.249905092
TAYL / UniM Bail High Use 951.249905092 TAYL OVERNIGHT LOAN
Tien, Hung-mao. The Great Transition: Political and Social Change in the Republic of China,
Stanford, Calif.: Hoover Institution Press, Stanford University. 1989 UniM Bail 951.24905
TIEN
Phillips, Steven. “Building a Taiwanese Republic: The Independence Movement, 1945–
Present” in Tucker, Nancy Bernkopf (ed.) Dangerous strait: the U.S.-Taiwan-China crisis,
New York: Columbia University Press, 2005, pp 44-69. UniM Bail 327.73051 DANG /
UniM INTERNET resource
Wachman, Alan. Taiwan: National Identity and Democratization, Armonk, N.Y.: M.E.
Sharpe, 1994. UniM Bail 305.800951 WACH
Wu, Yu-shan. “Strategic Triangle, Change of Guard, and Ma’s New Course” in Clark, Cal
(ed.), The Changing Dynamics of the Relations among China, Taiwan, and the United States,
Cambridge: Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2011: 30–61. UniM INTERNET resource.
13
6. How important has the desire for an independent Taiwan been in shaping the
decisions of Taiwan voters since 1996?
(Note: ‘Independence’ can mean different things to different people. Make sure you
define what you mean by an independent Taiwan.)
Achen, Christopher H. and T.Y. Wang. The Taiwan Voter, Ann Arbor University of
Michigan Press, 2017. Open Access: https://quod.lib.umich.edu/u/ump/mpub9375036
Allio, Fiorella; Liddell, Philip. “The Dynamics of the Identity Issue in Taiwan:
Understanding Uniqueness, Diversity and the Whole” China Perspectives 28 (2000): 43-50.
Amae, Yoshihisa; Damm, Jens. “’Whither Taiwanization?’ State, Society and Cultural
Production in the New Era” Journal of Current Chinese Affairs 40, no.1 (2011): 3-17
Baik, Ji-Woon. “East Asian Perspective on Taiwanese Identity: A Critical Reading of
‘Overcoming the Division System’ of Taiwan: A Radical Quarterly in Social Studies” Inter-
Asia Cultural Studies. 11, no.4 (2010): 591-604.
Balderas, Ulyses; Stockton, Hans. “Whither(ing) Identity? National Identity and Partisan
Support in Presidential Elections on Taiwan” American Journal of Chinese Studies 20, no.1.
(2013): 43-60.
Cabestan, Jean-Pierre; Black, Michael, “Specificities and Limits of Taiwanese Nationalism.’”
China Perspectives. no.62 (2005): 32-43
Chang, Bi-Yu. “From Taiwanisation to De-Sinification: Culture Construction in Taiwan
Since the 1990s” China Perspectives. no.56 (2004): 34-44
Chang, Hui-Ching; Holt, Rich. “Symbols in Conflict: Taiwan (Taiwan) and Zhongguo (China)
in Taiwan's Identity Politics” Nationalism and Ethnic Politics 13, no.1 (2007): 129-165.
Chao, Kang; Wong, Mon. “We Must Defend Our Society” Inter-Asia Cultural Studies. 8,
no.1 (2007): 169-170.
Chen, Chien-Kai. “The State-Society Interaction in the Process of Taiwan's Democratization
from 1990 to 1992” East Asia: An International Quarterly. 28, no.2 (2011): 115-134.
Chen, I-Chung; Wong, Mon. “The Question Lung Yingtai Could Not Answer” Inter-Asia
Cultural Studies. 8, no.1 (2007): 171-172.
Chen, Rou-lan. “Reconstructed Nationalism in Taiwan: A Politicised and Economically
Driven Identity” Nations and Nationalism 20, no.3. (2014): 523-545.
Cheng, Fan-Ting. “Dreamers’ Nightmare: The Melancholia of the Taiwanese Centennial
Celebration” Asian Theatre Journal 30, no.1. (2013): 172-188
Chi, Chang-hui. “The Death of a Virgin: The Cult of Wang Yulan and Nationalism in Jinmen,
Taiwan” Anthropological Quarterly 82, no.3. (2009): 669-690.
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Chu, Jou-juo. “Nationalism and Self-Determination: The Identity Politics in Taiwan” Journal
of Asian and African Studies 35, no.3 (2000): 303-321.
Chuang, YaChung, Democracy on trial : social movements and cultural politics in
postauthoritarian Taiwan Hong Kong : The Chinese University Press, 2013 UniM
INTERNET resource
Chuang, Yin C. “Divorcing China: The Swing from Patrilineal Genealogy of China to the
Matrilineal Genealogy of Taiwan in Taiwan’s National Imagination” Journal of Current
Chinese Affairs 40, no.1 (2011): 159-185.
Clark, Cal; Tan, Alexander C. “Political Polarization in Taiwan: A Growing Challenge to
Catch-All Parties?” Journal of Current Chinese Affairs. 41, no.3 (2012): 7-31.
Dittmer, Lowell. “Taiwan and the Issue of National Identity” Asian Survey 44, no.4 (2004):
475-483.
Fell, Dafydd. “Democracy on the Rocks: Taiwan’s Troubled Political System Since 2000”
Harvard Asia Pacific Review. 9, no.1 (2007): 21-25
Fleischauer, Stefan. “The 228 Incident and the Taiwan independence movement’s
construction of a Taiwanese identity” China Information. 21, no.3 (2007): 373-401.
Fleischauer, Stefan. “Taiwan’s Independence Movement” in Schubert, Gunter (ed),
Routledge Handbook of Contemporary Taiwan. London: Routledge, 2016: 68-84. UniM
INTERNET resource.
Hall, Brian. “Modernization and the Social Construction of National Identity: The Case of
Taiwanese Identity” Berkeley Journal of Sociology 47 (2003): 135-169.
Hatfield, D.J. “Chiang’s Benevolent Smile: Symbolic Reduction and National
Commemoration in Contemporary Taiwan” Harvard Asia Quarterly. 11, nos.2-3 (2008): 66-
79.
Hickey, Dennis Van Vranken. “America, China and Taiwan: Three Challenges For Chen
Shui-Bian” Journal of Contemporary China 15, no.48 (2006): 459-477.
Hsieh, John Fuh-sheng. “Ethnicity, National Identity, and Domestic Politics in Taiwan”
Journal of Asian and African Studies 40, nos.1-2 (2005): 13-28.
Hsieh, John Fuh-sheng; Niou, Emerson M.S. “Measuring Taiwanese Public Opinion on
Taiwanese Independence” China Quarterly no.181 (2005): 158-168.
Huang, Shuanfan. “Language, Identity and Conflict: A Taiwanese Study” International
Journal of the Sociology of Language.143 (2000): 139-149.
Hung, Ho-fung; Kuo, Huei-ying “One Country, Two Systems” and its Antagonists in Tibet
and Taiwan” China Information 24, no.3 (2010): 317-337.
15
Hwang, Yih-Jye. “The 2004 Hand-in-Hand Rally in Taiwan: ‘Traumatic’ Memory,
Commemoration, and Identity Formation” Nationalism and Ethnic Politics 20, no.3 (2014):
287-308
Jacobs, J. Bruce. Democratizing Taiwan Leiden; Boston: Brill, 2012. UniM INTERNET
resource.
Kim, Sungmoon; Lee, Hsin-wen. (eds). Reimagining Nation and Nationalism in
Multicultural East Asia, Abingdon, Oxon; New York, NY: Routledge, 2018. UniM
INTERNET resource
Lin, Catherine Kai-ping. “Taiwan’s Overseas Opposition Movement and Grassroots
Diplomacy in the United States: the case of the Formosan Association for Public Affairs”
Journal of Contemporary China 15, no.46 (2006): 133-159.
Marsh, Robert M. “Taiwan's Future National Identity: Attitudes and Geopolitical
Constraints”International Journal of Comparative Sociology 41, nos.3-4 (2000): 299-314.
Muyard, Frank. “Mid-term Analysis of the Ma Ying-Jeou Administration: The Difficulty of
Delivering the (Right) Goods” China Perspectives no.83 (2010): 5-21.
Muyard, Frank; Brown, Peter. “Taiwan, the birth of a Nation? The Recent Presidential
Election Witnessed the Rise of Taiwanese National Identity and a Further Failure of the
Kuomintang” China Perspectives no.53 (2004): 33-48.
Ngoi, Guat Peng; Tan, Leang Lee. “Red Shock in Taipei!” Inter-Asia Cultural Studies 8, no.1
(2007): 175-178.
Phillips, Steven. “Building a Taiwanese Republic: The Independence Movement, 1945–
Present” in Tucker, Nancy Bernkopf (ed.) Dangerous Strait: The U.S.-Taiwan-China Crisis,
New York: Columbia University Press, 2005: 44-69. UniM Bail 327.73051 DANG /
UniM INTERNET resource
Qi, Dongtao. “Divergent Popular Support for the DPP and the Taiwan Independence
Movement, 2000-2012” Journal of Contemporary China. 21, no.78 (2012): 973-991.
Qi, Dongtao. The Taiwan Independence Movement in and out of Power, New Jersey: World
Scientific, 2016. UniM Bail 324.2512490 QI
Rigger, Shelley. “Kuomintang Agonistes: Party Politics in the Wake of Taiwan’s 2016
Elections” Orbis: A Journal of World Affairs 60, no. 4 (2016): 488–503.
Schubert, Gunter. “Taiwan’s Political Parties and National Identity: The Rise of an
Overarching Consensus” Asian Survey 44, no.4 (2004): 534-554.
Schubert, Gunter; Damm, Jens (eds) Taiwanese Identity in the Twenty-First Century:
Domestic, Regional, and Global Perspectives. London; New York: Routledge, 2011. UniM
INTERNET resource
Shih, Chih-yu. “The Global Constitution of ‘Taiwan Democracy’: Opening Up the Image of a
16
Successful State After 9/11” East Asia: An International Quarterly. 20, no.3 (2003): 16-38.
Stockton, Hans. “Partisanship, Ethnic Identification, and Citizen Attitudes Toward Regime
and Government on Taiwan” Journal of Contemporary China. 15, no.49 (2006): 705-721.
Stockton, Hans. Politics of Taiwan. New York: Oxford University Press, 2012 UniM
INTERNET resource
Sullivan, Jonathan; Lowe, Will. “Chen Shui-bian: on Independence” China Quarterly. no.203
(2010): 619-638.
Tsai, Chia-hung; Chao, Shuang-Chun. “Nonpartisan’s and Party System of Taiwan: Evidence
from 1996, 2000 and 2004 Presidential Elections” Journal of Asian and African Studies 43,
no.6 (2008): 615-641.
Tsai, Ming-Chang; Chang, Chin-fen. “China-Bound for Jobs? The Influences of Social
Connections and Ethnic Politics in Taiwan” China Quarterly 203 (2010): 639-655.
Vickers, Edward. “History, Identity and the Politics of Taiwan’s Museums: Reflections on
the DPP-KMT Transition” China Perspectives 83 (2010): 92-106.
Wang, Hung-jen. “Liberalist Variation in Taiwan: Four Democratization Orientations”
Journal of Current Chinese Affairs 41, no.3 (2012): 93-116.
Wei, Chi-hung. “China’s Economic Offensive and Taiwan’s Defensive Measures: cross-
Strait fruit trade, 2005-2008” China Quarterly no.215 (2013): 641-662.
Wilson, R. Scott. “Making Hakka Spaces: Resisting Multicultural Nationalism in Taiwan”
Identities 16, no.4 (2009): 414-437.
Yu, Fu-Lai Tony; Kwan, Diana Sze Man “Social Construction of National Identity:
Taiwanese versus Chinese consciousness” Social Identities 14, no.1 (2008): 33-52.
17
7. What effect has Mainland China’s transformation into a global power had on the
identity of people in Taiwan since 2000? Has the identity of Taiwan people become
more Taiwanese, more Chinese, or something else?
(Note: Identity should be the focus of your discussion. To support your
answer, discuss specific examples related to one or more of these three areas: the
economy, domestic politics, and culture. Make sure to use evidence from the readings
to back up your argument.)
Achen, Christopher H.; Wang, T.Y.. The Taiwan Voter, Ann Arbor University of Michigan
Press, 2017. Open Access: https://quod.lib.umich.edu/u/ump/mpub9375036
Cheng, Joseph Y.S.; Mo, Shixiang “The Entry of Mainland Chinese Investment Into Taiwan:
Considerations and Measures Adopted by The Taiwan Government” China Information 22,
no.1 (2008): 91-118.
Chu, Ming-chin Monique; Kastner, Scott L. “Complex Cross-Strait Security Relations in the
Age of Globalization” in Chu, Ming-chin Monique and Kastner, Scott L. (eds) Globalization
and Security Relations Across the Taiwan Strait: In the Shadow of China, Abingdon, Oxon:
Routledge, 2014: 1-23. UniM INTERNET resource
Cole, J. Michael. Convergence or Conflict in the Taiwan Strait. London: Routledge,
2017. UniM INTERNET resource
Dittmer, Lowell “Taiwan’s Aim-Inhibited Quest For Identity and the China factor” Journal
of Asian and African Studies 40 (2005): 71-90.
Dittmer, Lowell. “Taiwan and the Waning Dream of Reunification.” in Dittmer, Lowell (ed.)
Taiwan and China: Fitful Embrace Oakland, California: University of California Press, 2017:
250-300. UniM INTERNET resource
Dittmer, Lowell (ed.) Taiwan and China: Fitful Embrace Oakland, California: University of
California Press, 2017. UniM INTERNET resource (chapters 1-4)
Ho, Ming-Sho Challenging Beijing’s Mandate of Heaven: Taiwan’s Sunflower Movement
and Hong Kong's Umbrella Movement, Temple University Press, 2019. UniM Bail
951.249058 HE UniM INTERNET resource.
Ho, Ming-sho. “Occupy Congress in Taiwan: Political Opportunity, Threat, and the
Sunflower Movement.” Journal of East Asian Studies 15, no. 1 (2015): 69–97.
Huang, Chin-Hao, and Patrick James. “Blue, Green or Aquamarine? Taiwan and the Status
Quo Preference in Cross-Strait Relations” China Quarterly no. 219 (2014): 670–692.
Jacobs, J. Bruce; Kang, Peter (eds) Changing Taiwanese Identities. Abingdon, Oxon; New
York, NY: Routledge, 2018. UniM INTERNET resource.
18
Jiang, Yi-huah. “Taiwan’s National Identity and Cross-Strait Relations” in Dittmer, Lowell
(ed.) Taiwan and China: Fitful Embrace. Oakland, California: University of California Press,
2017: 19-41. UniM INTERNET resource.
Kaeding, Malte Philipp. “Resisting Chinese Influence: Social Movements in Hong Kong and
Taiwan” Current History 114, no. 773 (2015): 210–216.
Kau, Michael Ying-mao. “Democratization on Taiwan and its Impact on the Relationship
with Mainland China,” in J. W. Wheeler, ed. Chinese Divide: Evolving Relations between
Taiwan and Mainland China. Indianapolis: Hudson Institute, 1996: 47– 72. UniM Bail
327.593051 CHIN
Keng, Shu; Tseng Jean Yu-Chen; Yu, Qiang. “The Strengths of China's Charm Offensive:
Changes in the Political Landscape of a Southern Taiwan Town under Attack from Chinese
Economic Power” The China Quarterly 232 (2017): 956–81.
Lee, Chun-Yi; Yin, Ming-xi. “Chinese Investment in Taiwan: A Challenge or an Opportunity
for Taiwan?” in Journal of Current Chinese Affairs 46, no. 1 (2017): 37-59.
Lee, Wei-chin. (ed). Taiwan’s Political Re-Alignment and Diplomatic Challenges, Cham,
Switzerland: Palgrave Macmillan, 2019. UniM INTERNET resource.
Liu, Frank C. S.; Li, Yitan. “Generation Matters: Taiwan’s Perceptions of Mainland China
and Attitudes towards Cross-Strait Trade Talks” Journal of Contemporary China 26, no. 104
(2017): 263–279.
McIntyre, Sophie. Imagining Taiwan: The Role of Art in Taiwan’s Quest for Identity. Leiden:
Brill, 2018. UniM Bail 709.51249 MCIN
Phillips, Steven. “Building a Taiwanese Republic: The Independence Movement, 1945–
Present” in Tucker, Nancy Bernkopf (ed.) Dangerous Strait: the U.S.-Taiwan-China crisis
New York: Columbia University Press, 2005: 44-69. UniM Bail 327.73051 DANG /
UniM INTERNET resource
Rigger, Shelley. Why Taiwan Matters: Small Island, Global Powerhouse. Lanham, Md:
Rowman & Littlefield. 2011. UniM INTERNET resource
Rigger, Shelley. “Strawberry Jam: National Identity, Cross-Strait Relations, and Taiwan’s
Youth” The Changing Dynamics of the Relations among China, Taiwan, and the United
States, edited by Cal Clark, and Janet Clark, Cambridge Scholars Publisher, 2011: 78-95.
UniM INTERNET resource
Rigger, Shelley. “The China Impact on Taiwan’s Generational Politics” in Schubert, Gunter
(ed), Routledge Handbook of Contemporary Taiwan. London: Routledge, 2016: 70-90. UniM
INTERNET resource.
Rowen, Ian. “Inside Taiwan’s Sunflower Movement: Twenty-Four Days in a Student-
Occupied Parliament, and the Future of the Region” Journal of Asian Studies 74, no. 1 (2015):
5–21.
19
Schubert, Gunter (ed.). Taiwan and the ‘China Impact’: Challenges and Opportunities,
London: Routledge, 2016. UniM INTERNET resource (Any of the chapters in this book
may be cited in your essay.)
Sullivan, Jonathan; Lee, Chun-Yi. A New Era in Democratic Taiwan: Trajectories and
Turning Points in Politics and Cross-Strait Relations, London; New York: Routledge, Taylor
& Francis Group, 2018. UniM Bail 320.951249 NEWE
Sullivan, Jonathan; Sapir, Eliyahu V. “Strategic Cross-Strait Discourse: A Comparative
Analysis of Three Presidential Terms” China Information 27, no.1 (2013): 11-30.
Yang, Chia-Ling. “The Political is the Personal: Women’s Participation in Taiwan’s
Sunflower Movement.” Social Movement Studies16, no. 6 (2017): 660-671, DOI:
10.1080/14742837.2017.1344542
Wu, Jieh-Min. “The China Factor in Taiwan: Impact and Response” in Schubert, Gunter (ed),
Routledge Handbook of Contemporary Taiwan. London: Routledge. 2016: 426-447. UniM
INTERNET resource.
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8. Do you think that the primary concern of Taiwan filmmakers and performing artists
working in the post-Martial Law era has been to make statements about Taiwan
identity and culture or are they more concerned with personal experiences and
feelings, with Taiwan being the setting with which these personal experiences and
feelings are connected?
You can write about either cinema or performing arts or you can write about both. (If
you write about cinema, make sure that you write about more than one filmmaker)
Bao, Weihong. “Biomechanics of Love: Reinventing the Avant-Garde in Tsai Ming-Liang’s
Wayward ‘Pornographic Musical.’” Journal of Chinese Cinemas 1 (2007): 139–60.
Berry, Chris and Feii Lu (eds).Island on the edge : Taiwan new cinema and after Hong Kong :
Hong Kong University Press, 2005. UniM INTERNET resource.
Browne, Nick. “Hou Hsiao-Hsien’s Puppetmaster: The Poetics of Landscape.” Asian Cinema
8, no. 1 (1996): 28–38.
Cai, Rong. “Gender Imaginations in Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon and the Wuxia World.”
Positions: East Asia Cultures Critique 13, no. 2 (2005): 441–71.
Chan, Kenneth. “Goodbye, Dragon Inn: Tsai Ming-Liang’s Political Aesthetics of Nostalgia,
Place, and Lingering.” Journal of Chinese Cinemas 1 (2007): 89–103.
Chan, Kenneth. “The Global Return of the Wu Xia Pian (Chinese Sword-Fighting Movie):
Ang Lee’s Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon.” Cinema Journal 43, no. 4 (2004): 3–17.
Chang, Kai-man. “Drifting Bodies and Flooded Spaces: Visualizing the Invisibility of
Heteronormativity in Tsai Ming-Liang’s ‘The River.’” Post Script 28, no. 1 (2008): 45–62.
Chang, Kai-Man. “Gender Hierarchy and Environmental Crisis in Tsai Ming-Liang’s ‘The
Hole.’” Film Criticism 33, no. 1 (2008): 25–44.
Chen, Leo Chanjen. “The Frustrated Architect: The Cinema of Edward Yang.” New Left
Review , no. 11 (2001): 115–28.
Chen, Tzu-Chin Insky. “Making Southeast Asian Migrant Workers Visible in Taiwanese
Cinema: Pinoy Sunday and Ye-Zai.” Cross-Currents: East Asian History and Culture Review
9, no. 1 (2020): 234–67.
Chi, Robert. “The New Taiwanese Documentary.” Modern Chinese Literature and Culture
15, no. 1 (2003): 146–96.
Chiu, Kuei-fen. “Taiwan and Its Spectacular Others: Aesthetic Reflexivity in Two
Documentaries by Women Filmmakers from Taiwan.” Asian Cinema 16, no. 1 (2005): 98–
107.
Chong, Woei Lien. “Alienation in the Modern Metropolis; the Visual Idiom of Taiwanese
Film Director Tsai Ming-Liang.” China Information 9, no. 4 (1995): 81–95.
21
Dai, Jinhua, and Jingyuan Zhang. “Hou Hsiao-Hsien’s Films: Pursuing and Escaping History.”
Inter-Asia Cultural Studies 9, no. 2 (2008): 239–50.
Davis, Darrell William and Ru-shou Robert Chen (eds) Cinema Taiwan: politics, popularity,
and state of the arts London : Routledge, 2007. UniM INTERNET resource.
Deppman, Hsiu-Chuang. “Cinema of Disillusionment: Chen Guofu, Cai Mingliang, and
Taiwan’s Second New Wave.” Positions: East Asia Cultures Critique 17, no. 2 (2009): 435–
54.
Deppman, Hsiu-Chuang. “Recipes for a New Taiwanese Identity? Food, Space, and Sex in
the Works of Ang Lee, Ming-Liang Tsai and T’ien-Wen Chu.” American Journal of Chinese
Studies 8, no. 2 (2001): 145–68.
Diffrient, David Scott. “The Sandwich Man: History, Episodicity and Serial Conditioning in
a Taiwanese Omnibus Film.” Asian Cinema 25 (2014): 71–92.
Hasumi, Shigehiko. “The Eloquence of the Taciturn: An Essay on Hou Hsiao-Hsien.” Inter-
Asia Cultural Studies 9, no. 2 (2008): 184–94.
Hong, Guo-Juin. “Limits of Visibility: Taiwan’s Tongzhi Movement in Mickey Chen’s
Documentaries.” Positions: East Asia Cultures Critique 21, no. 3 (2013): 683–701.
Huang, Yu Shan. “‘Creatiing and Distributing Films Openly’: On the Relationship between
Women’s Film Festivals and the Women’s Rights Movement in Taiwan.” Inter-Asia Cultural
Studies 4, no. 1 (2003): 157–58.
Hung, Christine Yu-Ting. “Are Women Included in History? The Debate of Micro-History
and Macro-History in Hou Hsiao-Hsien’s Film, A City of Sadness.” Asian Cinema 25 (2014):
49–70.
Klein, Christina. “Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon: A Diasporic Reading.” Cinema Journal
43, no. 4 (2004): 18–42.
Lai, Stan (Lai Shengchuan). “Luminosity in the Darkness: Remembering Edward Yang.”
Inter-Asia Cultural Studies 9, no. 1 (2008): 3–6.
Lee, Tain-Dow. “Rereading Cultural Significance of Taiwan’s Cinema in the 1990’s.” Asian
Cinema 7, no. 1 (1995): 3–11.
Lee, Vivian. “Pornography, Musical, Drag, and the Art Film: Performing ‘Queer’ in Tsai
Ming-Liang’s The Wayward Cloud.” Journal of Chinese Cinemas 1 (2007): 117–37.
Lim, Song Hwee. “Celluloid Comrades: Male Homosexuality in Chinese Cinemas in the
1990s.” China Information 16 (2002): 68–88.
Lin, Sylvia Li-Chun. “Between the Past and the Future: Documentary Films on the 2/28
Incident in Taiwan.” Modern Chinese Literature and Culture 21, no. 1 (2009): 46–71.
22
Lin, Sylvia Li-chun.Representing atrocity in Taiwan: the 2/28 incident and white terror in
fiction and film New York : Columbia University Press, 2007. UniM INTERNET resource.
Lo, Dennis. “Emergent National Discourses: Mythmaking and the National Story in
Taiwanese Roadtrip Films.” Asian Cinema 21, no. 1 (2010): 86–112.
Lo, Dennis. “Marginalized Sexuality in Tsai Ming Liang’s Cinema.” Amerasia Journal 37
(2011): 96–102.
Lu, Wan-Jun. “Made in Taiwan: Paratexts of Life of Pi and a Dynamic Sense of Place.”
Critical Studies in Media Communication 36, no. 3 (2019): 235–48.
Lupke, Christopher. “The Muted Interstices of Testimony: A City of Sadness and the
Predicament of Multiculturalism in Taiwan.” Asian Cinema 15, no. 1 (2004): 5–36.
Ma, Sheng-Mei. “Globalization’s Bottom: Subtitle and Switch in Wang Yu-Lin’s Taiwanese
Dialect Films.” Asian Cinema 25 (2014): 93–104.
Martin, Adrian. “What’s Happening? Story, Scene and Sound in Hou Hsiao-Hsien.” Inter-
Asia Cultural Studies 9, no. 2 (2008): 258–70.
Martin, Fran. “Introduction: Tsai Ming-Liang’s Intimate Public Worlds.” Journal of Chinese
Cinemas 1 (2007): 83–88.
Martin-Jones, David. “Branded City Living: Taipei Becoming Paris in Yi Ye Taibei / Au
Revoir Taipei (2010).” Asian Cinema 25 (2014): 15–31.
Michelon, Laurent. “Youth Culture and Urban Life in Taiwanese Cinema during the 1990s:
In the Grip of the City’s Evil Ways.” China Perspectives , no. 18 (1998): 61–67.
Mon, Ya-Feng, Film production and consumption in contemporary Taiwan : cinema as a
sensory circuit Amsterdam : Amsterdam University Press, 2016. UniM INTERNET resource.
Neri, Corrado. “Tsai Ming-Liang and the Lost Emotions of the Flesh.” Positions: East Asia
Cultures Critique 16, no. 2 (2008): 389–407.
Perspex. “The First Asian Lesbian Film and Video Festival in Taipei Celebrates a New Form
of Social Activism.” Inter-Asia Cultural Studies 7, no. 3 (2006): 527–32.
Rojas, Carlos. “‘Nezha Was Here’: Structures of Dis/Placement in Tsai Ming-Liang’s Rebels
of the Neon God.” Modern Chinese Literature and Culture 15, no. 1 (2003): 63–89.
Shah, Nishant. “Now Streaming on Your Nearest Screen: Contextualizing New Digital
Cinema through Kuso.” Journal of Chinese Cinemas 3 (2009): 15–31.
Shahani, Kumar. “Thinking about Hou’s Films.” Inter-Asia Cultural Studies 9, no. 2 (2008):
297–99.
Shiau, Hong-Chi. “A Brighter Summer Day: Mourning Yang De-Chang (Edward).” Asian
Cinema 18, no. 2 (2007): 294–302.
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Shiau, Hong-Chi. “Marketing Boys’ Love: Taiwan’s Independent Film, Eternal Summer, and
Its Audiences.” Asian Cinema 19, no. 1 (2008): 157–71.
Shiau, Hong-Chi. “Spectatorships, Pleasures, and Social Uses of Cinema: A Tentative Study
of the Reception of Cape No 7.” Asian Cinema 20, no. 1 (2009): 189–202.
Stuckey, G. Andrew. “Ghosts in the Theatre: Generic Play and Temporality in Tsai Ming-
Liang’s Goodbye, Dragon Inn.” Asian Cinema 25 (2014): 33–48.
Tian, Mo. “Representing Gender, Power and Body in The Wedding Banquet.” Asia Pacific
World 5, no. 1 (2014): 110–19.
Udden, James, No man an island : the cinema of Hou Hsiao-hsien Hong Kong : Hong Kong
University Press, 2017. UniM INTERNET resource.
Udden, James. “Hou Hsiao-Hsien and the Question of a Chinese Style.” Asian Cinema 13, no.
2 (2002): 54–75.
Udden, James. “Taiwan New Cinema: A Movement of Unintended Consequences.” Frontiers
of Literary Studies in China 7, no. 2 (2013): 159–82.
Udden, James. “Taiwanese Popular Cinema and the Strange Apprenticeship of Hou Hsiao-
Hsien.” Modern Chinese Literature and Culture 15, no. 1 (2003): 120–45.
Wang, Sharon Chialan. “Cape No.7 and Taiwan’s National Consciousness.” Asian Cinema
20, no. 2 (2009): 244–59.
Wang, Ying-bei. “Love Letters from the Colonizer: The Cultural Identity Issue in Cape No.7.”
Asian Cinema 20, no. 2 (2009): 260–71.
Wei, Ti. “How Did Hou Hsiao-Hsien Change Taiwan Cinema? A Critical Reassessment.”
Inter-Asia Cultural Studies 9, no. 2 (2008): 271–79.
Wen, Tien-Hsiang, and Sheuo Hui Gan. “Hou Hsiao-Hsien: A Standard for Evaluating
Taiwan’s Cinema.” Inter-Asia Cultural Studies 9, no. 2 (2008): 211–38.
Wood, Chris. “Realism, Intertextuality and Humour in Tsai Ming-Liang’s Goodbye, Dragon
Inn.” Journal of Chinese Cinemas 1 (2007): 105–16.
Wu, Huaiting, and Joseph Man Chan. “Globalizing Chinese Martial Arts Cinema: The
Global-Local Alliance and the Production of Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon.” Media,
Culture & Society 29, no. 2 (2007): 195–217.
Wu, Nianzhen, and D.W. Davis. “A New Taiwan Person? A Conversation with Wu Nien-
Chen.” Positions: East Asia Cultures Critique 11, no. 3 (2003): 717–34.
Yang, Karen Ya-Chu. “Passionately Documenting: Taiwan’s Latest Cinematic Revival.”
Journal of Film and Video 67, no. 2 (2015): 44–54.
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Yeh, Emilie Yueh-yu. “Elvis, Allow Me to Introduce Myself: American Music and
Neocolonialism in Taiwan Cinema.” Modern Chinese Literature and Culture 15, no. 1 (2003):
1–28.
Yeh, Emilie. “Bentu: Marketplace and Sentiments of Contemporary Taiwan Cinema.” Asian
Cinema 25 (2014): 7–13.
Zhang, Yingjin. “Articulating Sadness, Gendering Space: The Politics and Poetics of Taiyu
Films from 1960s Taiwan.” Modern Chinese Literature and Culture 25, no. 1 (2013): 1–46.
Performing arts
Chang, Huei-Yuan Belinda. “A Theatre of Taiwaneseness: Politics, Ideologies, and Gezaixi.”
Drama Review 41, no. 2 (1997): 111–29.
Chang, Shih-Lun. “The Face of Independence? A Visual Record of Taiwanese Indie Music
Scene.” Inter-Asia Cultural Studies 11, no. 1 (2010): 89–99.
Cheng, Fan-Ting. “Towards a Queer Island Disidentification of Taiwan: Golden Bough
Theatre’s Pirates and Formosa.” Third Text 28, no. 4–5 (2014): 427–41.
Guy, Nancy A. “Peking Opera as National Opera in Taiwan: What’s in a Name?” ACMR
Reports: Journal of the Association for Chinese Music Research , (1998): 67–87.
Guy, Nancy. “Feeling a Shared History through Song: ‘A Flower in the Rainy Night’ as a
Key Cultural Symbol in Taiwan.” TDR: The Drama Review 52, no. 4 (2008): 64–81.
Guy, Nancy. “Governing the Arts, Governing the State: Peking Opera and Political Authority
in Taiwan.” Ethnomusicology 43, no. 3 (1999): 508–26.
Guy, Nancy. “Performing Taiwan: Music, Dance, and Spectacle in the Celebration of
President Chen Shui-Bian’s Inauguration.” ACMR Reports: Journal of the Association for
Chinese Music Research , (2000): 21–50.
Ho, Wai-Chung. “The Production and Reproduction of Chinese and Taiwanese Identities in
Taiwan’s Popular Songs.” Social History 40, no. 4 (November 1, 2015): 518–37.
Hsieh, Hsiao-mei. “In the Name of Shakespeare: Cross-Cultural Adaptation in Taiwan’s
Beijing Opera.” Journal of Asian Pacific Communication 21 (2011): 319–29.
Hu, Tzu-Yun. “Hakka Female Identity in Postcolonial Taiwan: The Shigang Mama Theatre
Group and Images of Hakka Women.” Asian Theatre Journal 30, no. 2 (2013): 445–65.
Huang, Phyllis Yu-ting. “Representing Military Dependents’ Villages: From Tragic
Narratives to the Comedic Play Baodao Yi Cun [The Village].” Archiv Orientálni 82 (2014):
141–62.
Huang, Shuling. “Nation-Branding and Transnational Consumption: Japan-Mania and the
Korean Wave in Taiwan.” Media, Culture & Society 33, no. 1 (2011): 3–18.
25
Jaivin, Linda. “Hou Dejian and the Rise of Pop Music in Taiwan in the Seventies: What an
Artist Needs Most Is Courage.” Chime: Journal of the European Foundation for Chinese
Music Research , no. 9 (1996): 118–23.
Lei, Bi-qi Beatrice. “Romantic Semblance and Prohibitive Presence: Green Forrest, My
Home as a Case-Study of Taiwan’s Occidental Myth and Its Discontents.” Inter-Asia
Cultural Studies 10, no. 3 (2009): 422–38.
Liao, Ping-hui. “Rewriting Taiwanese National History: The February 28 Incident as
Spectacle.” Public Culture 5, no. 2 (1993): 281–96.
Lin, Cheng-Yi. “The Evolution of Taipei’s Music Industry: Cluster and Network Dynamics
in the Innovation Practices of the Music Industry.” Urban Studies 51, no. 2 (February 1,
2014): 335–54.
Lin, Sylvia Li Chun. “Toward a New Identity: Nativism and Popular Music in Taiwan.”
China Information 17 (2003): 83–109.
Lin, Wen-ling. “A Queer Fantasy World of The New Member: The Phenomenon of the First
Boys’ Love Musical in Taiwan.” Asian Theatre Journal 35, no. 2 (2018): 418–42.
Lu, Tasaw Hsin-chun. “Politics and Tactics in Revolutionary Performance: A Sino-Burmese
Arts Troupe in Transnational Circulation.” Asian Theatre Journal 36, no. 2 (2019): 370–94.
Ma, Jean. “Delayed Voices: Intertextuality, Music and Gender in The Hole.” Journal of
Chinese Cinemas 5 (2011): 123–39.
Martin, Fran. “The Perfect Lie: Sandee Chan and Lesbian Representability in Mandarin Pop
Music.” Inter-Asia Cultural Studies 4, no. 2 (2003): 264–80.
Payne, Christopher. “Wushe, Literature, and Melodic Black Metal: The ‘Nonpolitics’ of
Wuhe and the ‘Political’ ChthoniC.” Positions: East Asia Cultures Critique 22, no. 2 (2014):
403–28.
Perris, Arnold. “Feeding the Hungry Ghosts: Some Observations on Buddhist Music and
Buddhism from Both Sides of the Taiwan Strait.” Ethnomusicology 30, no. 3 (1986): 428–48.
Read, Graeme. “Youth and Political Music in Taiwan: Resignifying the Nation at Inland
Rock and Tshingsan Fest.” Cross-Currents: East Asian History and Culture Review 9, no. 1
(2020): 209–33.
Schweig, Meredith. “‘Young Soldiers, One Day We Will Change Taiwan’: Masculinity
Politics in the Taiwan Rap Scene.” Ethnomusicology 60, no. 3 (2016): 383–410.
Schweig, Meredith. “Hoklo Hip-Hop: Resignifying Rap as Local Narrative Tradition in
Taiwan.” CHINOPERL: Journal of Chinese Oral and Performing Literature 33, no. 1 (2014):
37–59.
26
Silvio, Teri. “First as Farce, Then as Tragedy: Popular Allegory and National Analogy in
Contemporary Taiwanese Opera.” Taiwan Journal of Anthropology = Taiwan Ren Lei Xue
Kan 3, no. 2 (2005): 45–76.
Silvio, Teri. “Remediation and Local Globalizations: How Taiwan’s ‘Digital Video Knights-
Errant Puppetry’ Writes the History of the New Media in Chinese.” Cultural Anthropology
22, no. 2 (2007): 285–313.
Smith, Ron. “Magical Realism and Theatre of the Oppressed in Taiwan: Rectifying
Unbalanced Realities with Chung Chiao’s Assignment Theatre.” Asian Theatre Journal 22,
no. 1 (2005): 107–21.
Sporton, Gregory. “Dance Culture and Statuary Politics: Chiang Kai-Shek and the Myth of
Primitivism.” New Theatre Quarterly 20, no. 3 (2004): 280–85.
Sung, Sang-Yeon. “Constructing a New Image: Hallyu in Taiwan.” European Journal of East
Asian Studies 9 (2010): 25–45.
Taylor, Jeremy E. “From Transnationalism to Nativism? The Rise, Decline and Reinvention
of a Regional Hokkien Entertainment Industry.” Inter-Asia Cultural Studies 9, no. 1 (2008):
62–81.
Taylor, Jeremy. “The Clash of City and Village in Taiwanese Popular Songs: Images of the
Hometown.” Chime: Journal of the European Foundation for Chinese Music Research ,
January 1, 2005, 72–87.
Tuan, Iris Hsin-chun. “My Daughter’s Wedding. Directed by David Jian.” Asian Theatre
Journal 28, no. 2 (2011): 573–77.
Tuan, Iris. “Xiangsi Nostalgia.” Asian Theatre Journal 34, no. 2 (2017): 479–82.
Utz, Christian. “The Potential of Cultural Diversity: The Impact of Traditional Music on
Musical Composition in Taiwan since the 1970s.” Journal of Music in China 4, no. 1–2
(2002): 129–65.
Wang, Fang Ping, Jung Che Chang, and Zita Cheng. “About Licensed Prostitutes Apocalypse,
Our Life Saving Vinegar.” Inter-Asia Cultural Studies 7, no. 2 (2006): 344–47.
Wei, Shu-chu. “Media Review: Modern Faces of Taiwanese Gezai Xi Opera: Two Plays by
Sunhope Taiwanese Opera Troupe.” CHINOPERL: Journal of Chinese Oral and Performing
Literature 37, no. 2 (2018): 171–77.
Weinstein, John B. “Multilingual Theatre in Contemporary Taiwan.” Asian Theatre Journal
17, no. 2 (2000): 269–83.
27
9. To what extent had Chinese society in colonial Singapore and Malaya (in the period
between the mid 19th century and the outbreak of World War II) become a distinctive
culture and to what extent was it still a transplanted version of society in China? Did
engagement with colonial powers and indigenous society create a culture that was
significantly different from that in China, or was it essentially a Chinese culture that
happened to be located in Southeast Asia?
Bernards, Brian. “From Diasporic Nationalism to Transcolonial Consciousness: Lao She’s
Singaporean Satire, Little Po’s Birthday.” Modern Chinese Literature and Culture 26, no. 1
(2014): 1–40.
Carstens, Sharon. Histories, Cultures, Identities: Studies in Malaysian Chinese Worlds
Singapore: Singapore University Press, C2005. Unim Baill Res 959.5004951
CARS OVERNIGHT LOAN
Chi, Chang-Hui. “Networks and Emplacement: Jinmen Migrants in Singapore, 1850s-1942.”
Journal of Chinese Overseas 6, no.1 (2010): 22-42.
Chi, Chang-hui. “Networks and Emplacement: Jinmen Migrants in Singapore, 1850s-1942.”
Journal of Chinese Overseas 6 (2010): 22–42.
Chua, Ai Lin. “Nation, Race, and Language: Discussing Transnational Identities in Colonial
Singapore, Circa 1930.” Modern Asian Studies 46, Pt.2 (2012): 283-302.
Chung, Stephanie Po-Yin. “The Transformation of an Overseas Chinese Family: Three
Generations of the Eu Tong Sen Family, 1822-1941” Modern Asian Studies 39, Pt.3 (2005):
599-630
Clammer, John R. Straits Chinese Society: Studies in the Sociology of the Baba Communities
of Malaysia and Singapore Singapore: Singapore University Press
Cushman, J.W. “The Khaw Group: Chinese Business in Early Twentieth-Century Penang.”
Journal of Southeast Asian Studies 17, no.1 (1986): 58-79
Doran, Christine “Bright Celestial: Progress in the Political Thought of Tan Teck Soon”
Sojourn: Social Issues in Southeast Asia (Singapore): 21, no.1 (Apr 2006): 46-47
Frost, Mark Ravinder. “'Emporium in Imperio': Nanyang Networks and the Straits Chinese in
Singapore, 1819-1914.” Journal of Southeast Asian Studies (Singapore): 36, no.1 (2005): 29-
66
Hung, Tzu-Hui Celina. “'There Are No Chinamen in Singapore': Creolization and Self-
Fashioning of the Straits Chinese in the Colonial Contact Zone.” Journal of Chinese
Overseas 5 (2009). Pages 257-290.
28
Kaori, Shinozaki. “The Foundation of Penang Chinese Chamber of Commerce in 1903:
Protecting Chinese Interests in the Two States.” Journal of the Malaysian Branch, Royal
Asiatic Society 79, Pt.1, no.290 (2006): 43-65
Khoo, Joo Ee the Straits Chinese: A Cultural History Amsterdam; Kuala Lumpur: Pepin
Press, 1996, 1998. Unim Bail Res 959.004951 KHOO OVERNIGHT LOAN
Khor, Neil Jin Keong “Economic Change and the Emergence of the Straits Chinese in
Nineteenth-Century Penang” Journal of the Malaysian Branch, Royal Asiatic Society 79,
Pt.2, no.291 (2006): 59-83
Khor, Neil Jin Keong “Imperial Cosmopolitan Malaya: A Study of Realist Fiction in the
'Straits Chinese Magazine'”Journal of the Malaysian Branch, Royal Asiatic Society 81, Pt.1,
no.294 (2008): 27-47
Kuo, Huei-Ying. “ Chinese Bourgeois Nationalism in Hong Kong and Singapore in the
1930s.” Journal of Contemporary Asia 36, no.3 (2006): 385-405.
Lam, Lap. “Poetic Record of Local Customs: Bamboo Branch Verses of Singapore (1888-
1941).” Journal of Chinese Overseas 15 (2019): 5–32.
Lee, Kam Hing. “State Policy, Community Identity, and Management of Chinese Cemeteries
in Colonial Malaya.” Archipel 92 (2017): 91–110.
Lee, Su Kim. “The Peranakan Associations of Malaysia and Singapore: History and Current
Scenario.” Journal of the Malaysian Branch, Royal Asiatic Society 82, Pt.2, no.297 (2009):
167-177
Leow, Rachel. “'Do You Own Non-Chinese Mui Tsai?' Re-Examining Race and Female
Servitude in Malaya and Hong Kong, 1919-1939.” Modern Asian Studies 46, Pt.6 (2012):
1736-1763.
Lian, Kwen Fee; Koh, Keng We. “Chinese Enterprise in Colonial Malaya: The Case of Eu
Tong Sen.” Journal of Southeast Asian Studies 35, no.3 (2004): 415-432
Loh, Wei Leng. “Peranakan Chinese in Penang and the Region: Evolving Identities and
Networks.” Journal of the Malaysian Branch, Royal Asiatic Society 82, Pt.2, no.297 (2009):
1-7
Mahani Musa; Badriyah Haji Salleh. “Muslim Merchants and Traders in Penang, 1860s-
1970s.” Journal of the Malaysian Branch, Royal Asiatic Society 86, Pt.2, no.305 (2013): 33-
58.
Martin, Andrew. “Suppressing Communism in Singapore, 1920-1938.” Harvard Asia
Quarterly 13, no. 2 (2011): 21–29.
Peterson, Glen. “Overseas Chinese and Merchant Philanthropy in China: from Culturalism to
Nationalism” Journal of Chinese Overseas (Singapore): 1, no.1 (May 2005): 87-109
29
Qu, Jingyi; Wong, Chee Meng. “Historical Trajectories and Lost Heritage of Early Chinese
Schools in Singapore: Case Study of Yeung Ching School in ‘Chinatown.’” Asian Ethnicity
20, no. 4 (2019): 399–417.
Salmon, Claudine. “Chinese Merchants in Southeast Asia.” in Lombard, Denys and Aubin,
Jean (eds) Asian Merchants and Businessmen in the Indian Ocean and the China Sea. Oxford;
New York: Oxford University Press, 2000. Pages: 329-351.
Song, Ong Siang One Hundred Years' History of the Chinese in Singapore Singapore; New
York: Oxford University Press, 1984 Unim Bail 959.5703 SONG.
Tagliacozzo, Eric. “Navigating Communities: Race, Place, and Travel in the History of
Maritime Southeast Asia.” Asian Ethnicity 10, no.2 (2009): 97-120
Tan, Cheng Han. “Private Ordering and the Chinese in Nineteenth Century Straits
Settlements.” Asian Journal of Comparative Law 11, no. 1 (2016): 27–53.
Tan, Diana Ooi “The Penang Straits Chinese British Association” Malaysia in History 21,
no.2 (Dec 1978): 43-55
Tan, Soon Cheng. “Activists on the Fringe: Chinese Intelligentsia in Penang in the Early 20th
Century” Journal of Chinese Overseas 3, no.1 (2007): 34-96
Trocki Carl A. Opium and Empire: Chinese Society in Colonial Singapore, 1800-1910 Ithaca,
N.Y.: Cornell University Press, 1990. Unim ERC B 306.095957 TROC
Warren, James Francis. Rickshaw Coolie: A People's History of Singapore (1880-1940)
Singapore; New York: Oxford University Press, 1986.Unim Bail 959.5703 WARR
Wong, Danny Tze Ken. “Early Chinese Presence in Malaysia as Reflected by Three
Cemeteries (17th-19th C.).” Archipel 92 (2017): 9–21.
Wong, Yee Tuan. “Hokkien Merchants and the Kian Teik Tong: Economic and Political
Influence in Nineteenth-Century Penang and Its Region.” Frontiers of History in China 11,
no. 4 (2016): 600–627.
Wu, Xiao An. “ Rice Trade and Chinese Rice Millers in the Late-Nineteenth and Early-
Twentieth Centuries: The Case of British Malaya.” in Tagliacozzo, Eric and Chang, Wen-
Chin (eds) Chinese Circulations: Capital, Commodities, and Networks in Southeast Asia.
Durham: Duke University Press, 2011: 336-359.
Wu, Xiao An. “A Prominent Chinese 'Towhay' from the Periphery: The Choong Family.” in
Yeoh, Seng Guan, et al. (eds) Penang and Its Region: The Story of an Asian Entrepôt.
Singapore: NUS Press, 2009: 190-212
Yao, Souchou “Ethnic Boundaries and Structural Differentiation: An Anthropological
Analysis of the Straits Chinese in Nineteenth Century Singapore” Sojourn: Social Issues in
Southeast Asia 2, no.2 (Aug 1987): 209-230
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Yao, Souchou “Social Virtues as Cultural Text: Colonial Desire and the Chinese in 19th
Century Singapore” in Chew, Phyllis G.L. and Kramer-Dahl, Anneliese (eds). Reading
Culture: Textual Practices in Singapore. Singapore: Times Academic Press, 1999. 99-122
Yen Ching-Hwang. Community and Politics: The Chinese in Colonial Singapore and
Malaysia Singapore: Times Academic Press, 1995. MBS 305.89510595 YEN
Yen, Ching-Hwang. Overseas Chinese Nationalism in Singapore and Malaya, 1877-1912
Adelaide: University of Adelaide, Centre for Asian Studies, 1979.Unim Bail 320.54089951
CHIN
Yen, Ching-Hwang. A Social History of the Chinese in Singapore and Malaya, 1800-1911
Singapore: Oxford University Press, 1986. Unim Baill Res 959.5004951
YEN OVERNIGHT LOAN
Yeoh, Brenda S.A. “The Control of Sacred Space: Conflicts Over the Chinese Burial
Grounds in Colonial Singapore, 1880-1930.” Journal of Southeast Asian Studies 22, no.2
(1991): 282-311
Yong, C.F. “The Modern Transformation of Chinese Political Leadership in Colonial
Singapore” in Suryadinata, Leo (ed.) Ethnic Chinese in Singapore and Malaysia: A Dialogue
Between Tradition and Modernity. Singapore: Times Academic Press, 2001. 85-107
31
10. Why has there been so much difficulty in accepting Chinese Indonesians as full
citizens of Indonesia since 1945? Is it a matter of cultural and religious differences or
is it primarily due to political and economic tensions associated with the
disproportionate number of Chinese people involved in the top level of the economy,
or is it simply scapegoating? (Note: You may concentrate on the post-war period or
link the situation since 1945 back to the colonial era.)
Aguilar, Filomeno V., Jr. “Citizenship, Inheritance, and the Indigenizing of ‘Orang Chinese’
in Indonesia” Positions: East Asia Cultures Critique 9, no.3 501-533.
Alfirdaus, Laila Kholid. “Disaster and Discrimination: The Ethnic Chinese Minority in
Padang in the Aftermath of the September 2009 Earthquake” Sojourn: Journal of Social
Issues in Southeast Asia 29, no.1 (Mar 2014). 159-183
Chiou, Syuan-yuan. “A Controversy Surrounding Chinese-Indonesian Muslims' Practice of
Imlek Salat in Central Java” In: Sai, Siew-Min and Hoon, Chang-Yau, eds. Chinese
Indonesians Reassessed: History, Religion and Belonging. London; New York, NY:
Routledge, 2013: 200-227.
Chua, Christian. Chinese big business in Indonesia : the state of capital New York ; London :
Routledge, 2008 UniM INTERNET resource
Colombijn, Freek; Barwegen, Martine. “Racial Segregation in the (Post) Colonial City: The
Case of Indonesia” Urban Geography 30, no.8 (2009): 838-856.
Dieleman, Marleen; Koning, Juliette; Post, Peter (eds). Chinese Indonesians and Regime
Change. Leiden; Boston: Brill, 2011. UniM INTERNET resource
Gottowik, Volker. “Transnational, Translocal, Transcultural: Some Remarks on the Relations
Between Hindu-Balinese and Ethnic Chinese in Bali” Sojourn: Journal of Social Issues in
Southeast Asia 25, no.2 (2010): 178-212.
Coppel, Charles A. Studying Ethnic Chinese in Indonesia. Singapore: Singapore Society of
Asian Studies, 2002. UniM Bail 305.89510598 COPP
Freedman, Amy L. Political Participation and Ethnic Minorities: Chinese overseas in
Malaysia, Indonesia, and the United States New York: Routledge, 2000. UniM Bail
306.2089951 FREE
Hadler, Jeffrey “Translations of Antisemitism: Jews, the Chinese, and Violence in Colonial
and Post-Colonial Indonesia” indonesia and the Malay World 32, no.94 (2004): 291-313.
Heryanto, Ariel. “Silence in Indonesian Literary Discourse: The Case of the Indonesian
Chinese” Sojourn: Social Issues in Southeast Asia 12, no.1 (1997): 26-45.
Hoon, Chang-Yau “Assimilation, Multiculturalism, Hybridity: The Dilemmas of the Ethnic
Chinese in Post-Suharto Indonesia” Asian Ethnicity 7, no.2 (2006):149-166
32
Hoon, Chang-Yau. Chinese Identity in Post-Suharto Indonesia: Culture, Politics and Media
Brighton: Sussex Academic Press, 2008. UniM Bail 305.89510598 HOON
Jacobsen, Michael. “Islam and Processes of Minorisation among Ethnic Chinese in Indonesia:
Oscillating Between Faith and Political Economic Expediency” Asian Ethnicity 6, no.2
(2005) 71-87.
Koning, Juliette; Dahles, Heidi. “Spiritual Power, Ethnic Chinese Managers and The Rise of
Charismatic Christianity” Copenhagen Journal of Asian Studies 27, no.1 (2009): 5-37
Melvin, Jess. “Why not Genocide? Anti-Chinese Violence in Aceh, 1965-1966” Journal of
Current Southeast Asian Affairs 32, no.3 (2013): 63-91
Panggabean, Samsu Rizal; Smith, Benjamin. “Explaining Anti-Chinese Riots in Late 20th
Century Indonesia” World Development 39, no.2 (2011): 231-242
Setijadi-Dunn, Charlotte; Barker, Thomas. “Imagining ‘Indonesia’: Ethnic Chinese Film
Producers in Pre-Independence Cinema” Asian Cinema 21, no.2 (2010): 25-47.
Tan, Chee-Beng. “Indonesian Chinese in Hong Kong: Re-Migration, Re-Establishment of
Livelihood and Belonging” Asian Ethnicity 12, no.1 (2011): 101-119.
Thung Ju Lan. “Contesting the Post-Colonial Legal Construction of Chinese Indonesians As
‘Foreign Subjects’” Asian Ethnicity 13, no.4 (2012): 373-387
Lindsey, Tim; Pausacker, Helen. (eds) Chinese Indonesians: Remembering, Distorting,
Forgetting, Singapore: Institute of Southeast Asian Studies, 2005. UniM Bail 305.89510598
CHIN
Nonini, Donald M. “Indonesia seen by Outside Insiders: Its Chinese Alters in Transnational
Space” Social Analysis 50, no.1 (2006): 214-225.
Purdey ¸Jemma. Anti-Chinese Violence in Indonesia, 1996-1999, Honolulu: University of
Hawai'i Press, 2006. UniM Bail 305.89510598 PURD
Suryadinata, Leo (ed.). Political Thinking of the Indonesian Chinese, 1900-1995: A
Sourcebook Singapore: Singapore University Press, National University of Singapore, 1997.
UniM Bail 959.8004951 POLI
Suryadinata, Leo. Chinese Indonesians: State Policy, Monoculture and Multiculturalism
Singapore: Eastern Universities Press ; Cardiff: Drake, 2004. UniM Bail 305.89510598
CHIN
Suryadinata, Leo. The Culture of the Chinese Minority in Indonesia Singapore: Marshall
Cavendish Academic, 2004. UniM Bail 305.89510598 SURY
Suryadinata, Leo. The Ethnic Chinese Issue and National Integration in Indonesia Singapore:
Institute of Southeast Asian Studies, 1999. UniM Bail 305.89510598 SURY
33
Thung, Ju-lan. “Ethnicity, Nation-State and Citizenship among Chinese Indonesians” in Mee,
Wendy and Kahn, Joel S. (eds) Questioning Modernity in Indonesia and Malaysia. Singapore:
NUS Press; Kyoto: Kyoto University Press, 2012. 145-166.
Tanasaldy, Taufiq. “Opportunities and Challenges: Social and Political Activism of the
Indonesian Chinese in Post-Reform Indonesia” RIMA: Review of Indonesian and Malaysian
Affairs 47, no. 2 (2013): 91-116.
Tsai, Yen-ling. “Spaces of Exclusion, Walls of Intimacy: Rethinking ‘Chinese Exclusivity’ in
Indonesia” Indonesia 92 (2011). 125-156.
Toer, Pramoedya Ananta. The Chinese in Indonesia: An English Translation of Hoakiau di
Indonesia (first published in 1960) Singapore: Select Pub. 2007. UniM Bail 305.89510598
TOER
Turner, Sarah; Seymour, Richard. “Ethnic Chinese and the Indonesian Crisis: The Emergence
of a New Ethnic Identity?” in Starrs, Roy (ed.) Nations under Siege: Globalization and
Nationalism in Asia. Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire; New York: Palgrave, 2002, 169-
194.
Turner, Sarah; Allen, Pamela. “Chinese Indonesians in a Rapidly Changing Nation: Pressures
of Ethnicity and Identity” Asia Pacific Viewpoint 8., no. 1 (2007): 112-127.
Twang, Peck Yang. The Chinese Business Élite in Indonesia and the Transition to
Independence, 1940-1950 Kuala Lumpur; New York: Oxford University Press, 1998.
Wibowo, Ignatius “Exit, Voice, and Loyalty: Indonesian Chinese After the Fall of Soeharto”
Sojourn: Social Issues in Southeast Asia 16, no.1 (2001): 125-146.
Wijaya, Yahya. Business, Family, and Religion: Public Theology in the Context of the
Chinese-Indonesian Business Community Oxford; New York: Lang, 2002. UniM
Bail 214.64089951 WIJA
34
11. Do you think that the protection of Chinese identity in a Malay-dominated society has
been the key issue for Chinese Malaysians or do you think that full acceptance as
Malaysian citizens has been their primary goal?
Carstens, Sharon A. Histories, Cultures, Identities: Studies in Malaysian Chinese Worlds
Singapore: Singapore University Press, 2005. Unim Bail 959.5004951 CARS
Chin, Ung-Ho. Chinese Politics in Sarawak: A Study of the Sarawak United People’s Party
Kuala Lumpur Oxford University Press, 1996. UniM Bail 324.2595407 CHIN
Chiu, Kuei-fen. “Empire of the Chinese Sign: The Question of Chinese Diasporic
Imagination in Transnational Literary Production” Journal of Asian Studies 67, no.2 (2008):
593-62.
Clammer, John R. (ed.) Studies in Chinese Folk Religion in Singapore and Malaysia
Singapore: Board of Editors, Contributions to Southeast Asian Ethnography, 1983 UniM
ERC B 398.409595 STUD
Chen, Lingchei Letty. “When Does ‘Diaspora’ End and ‘Sinophone’ Begin?” Postcolonial
Studies 18, no. 1 (2015): 52–66.
Collins, Alan. “Chinese Educationalist in Malaysia: Defenders of Chinese Identity” Asian
Survey 46, no.2 (2006): 298-318.
Dahles, Heidi. “In Pursuit of Capital: The Charismatic Turn among the Chinese Managerial
and Professional Class in Malaysia” Asian Ethnicity 8, no.2 (2007): 89-109.
DeBernardi, Jean. Rites of Belonging: Memory, Modernity, and Identity in a Malaysian
Chinese Community Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press, 2004. UniM
Bail 305.895105951 DEBE
DeBernardi, Jean. The Way that Lives in the Heart: Chinese Popular Religion and Spirit
Mediums in Penang, Malaysia Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press, 2006. UniM
Bail 299.51095951 DEBE
Ding, Choo Ming; Ooi, Kee Beng, (eds). Chinese Studies of the Malay World: A
Comparative Approach. Singapore: Eastern Universities Press, 2003. UniM
Bail 959.5004951 COLL
Freedman, Amy L. Political Participation and Ethnic Minorities: Chinese Overseas in
Malaysia, Indonesia, and the United States New York: Routledge, 2000. UniM
Bail 306.2089951 FREE
Gabriel, Sharmani Patricia. “‘After the Break’: Re-Conceptualizing Ethnicity, National
Identity and Malaysian-Chinese Identities” Ethnic and Racial Studies 37, no. 7 (2014): 1211–
1224.
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Hara, Fujio. Malayan Chinese and China: Conversion in Identity Consciousness 1945-1957
Singapore: Singapore University Press, 2003. UniM Bail 323.119510595
Heng, Pek Koon. Chinese Politics in Malaysia: A History of the Malaysian Chinese
Association Singapore; New York: Oxford University Press, 1988. 320.540951249 CULT
Hou, Kok Chung. “Chinese Culture in Malaysia: Attitudes of the Chinese and Malay leaders”
in Lee, Guan Kin, (ed.) Demarcating Ethnicity in New Nations: Case of the Chinese in
Singapore, Malaysia, and Indonesia. Singapore: Konrad-Adenauer Stiftung; Singapore
Society of Asian Studies, 2006. 253:151-175.
Khoo, Joo Ee. The Straits Chinese: A Cultural History Amsterdam; Kuala Lumpur: Pepin
Press, 1996, 1998. UniM Bail 959.004951 KHOO
Khor, Yoke Lim; Ng, Miew Luan. “Chinese Newspapers, Ethnic Identity and the State: The
Case of Malaysia” in Sun, Wanning (ed.) Media and the Chinese Diaspora: Community,
Communications and Commerce. London; New York: Routledge, 2006: 137-149.
Lai, Ah Eng (ed.). Beyond Rituals and Riots: Ethnic Pluralism and Social Cohesion in
Singapore Singapore: Eastern Universities Press, 2004. 305.895957 BEYO
Lam, Theodora; Yeoh, Brenda S.A. “Negotiating ‘Home’ and ‘National Identity’: Chinese-
Malaysian Transmigrants in Singapore” Asia Pacific Viewpoint 45, no.2 (2004): 141-164
Lee, Kam Hing; Tan, Chee Beng (eds). The Chinese in Malaysia New York: Oxford
University Press, 1999. UniM Bail 959.5004951 CHIN
Lee, Ting Hui. Chinese schools in British Malaya: Policies and Politics Singapore: South
Seas Society, 2006. UniM Bail 959.503 LEE
Lim, Kean Siew. The Eye over the Golden Sands: The Memoirs of a Penang Family. Petaling
Jaya, Selangor Darul Ehsan, Malaysia: Pelanduk Publications, 1997. UniM Bail 959.51 LIM
Lim, Jason. “The Education Concerns and Political Outlook of Lim Keng Lian (1893-1968)”
Journal of Chinese Overseas 3, no.2 (2007): 194-219.
Loh, Kok Wah. The Politics of Chinese Unity in Malaysia: Reform and Conflict in the
Malaysian Chinese Association, 1971-73 Singapore: Maruzen Asia, 1982. UniM
Bail 320.9595 LOH
Loh, Francis Kok Wah. Beyond the Tin Mines: Coolies, Squatters, and New Villagers in the
Kinta Valley, Malaysia, C. 1880-1980 Singapore; New York: Oxford University Press, 1988.
338.27453 LOH
Nonini, Donald M. “Chinese Society” Coffee-Shop Talk, Possessing Gods: The Politics of
Public Space among Diasporic Chinese in Malaysia positions: east asia cultures critique 6,
no.2 (1998): 439-473.
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Nonini, Donald M. “All are Flexible, but Some are more Flexible than Others: Small-Scale
Chinese Business in Malaysia” in Jomo K.S.; Folk, Brian C. (eds.) Ethnic Business: Chinese
Capitalism in Southeast Asia. London: Routledge Curzon, 2003. 73-91.
Nonini, Donald M. “Shifting Identities, Positioned Imaginaries: Transnational Traversals and
Reversals by Malaysian Chinese” in Ong, Aihwa; Nonini, Donald M., (eds.) Ungrounded
Empires: The Cultural Politics of Modern Chinese Transnationalism. New York: Routledge,
1997: 203-227.
Nonini, Donald M. “The Dialectics of ‘Disputatiousness’ and ‘Rice-Eating Money’: Class
Confrontation and Gendered Imaginaries among Chinese Men in West Malaysia” American
Ethnologist 26, no.1 (1999): 47-68.
Nonini, Donald M. “Toward a (Proper) Postwar History of Southeast Asia Petty Capitalism:
Predation, the State, and Chinese Small Business Capital in Malaysia” in Smart, Alan; Smart,
Josephine, (eds) Petty Capitalists and Globalization: Flexibility, Entrepreneurship, and
Economic Development. Albany: State University of New York Press, 2005: 167-200
Segawa, Noriyuki. “Malaysia’s 1996 Education Act: The Impact of a Multiculturalism-Type
Approach on a National Integration” Sojourn: Journal of Social Issues in Southeast Asia 22,
no.1 (2007): 30-56.
Siaw, Laurence K.L. Chinese Society in Rural Malaysia: A Local History of the Chinese in
Titi, Jelebu Kuala Lumpur ; New York: Oxford University Press, 1983 UniM Bail 959.51
SIAW
Strauch, Judith. Chinese Village Politics in the Malaysian State Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard
University Press, 1981. UniM Bail 305.89510595 STRA
Tan, Chee-Beng. Chinese Minority in a Malay State: The Case of Terengganu in Malaysia
Singapore: Eastern Universities Press, 2002. UniM Bail 959.5004951 TAN
Tan, Chee-Beng. The Development and Distribution of Dejiao Associations in Malaysia and
Singapore: A Study on a Chinese Religious Organization Singapore: Institute of Southeast
Asian Studies, 1985.UniM Bail 299.51465 TAN
Tan, Liok Ee. “A Century of Change: Education in the Lives of Four Generations of Chinese
Women in Malaysia” in Charney, Michael W.; Yeoh, Brenda S.A. and Tong, Chee Kiong,
(Eds.) Asian Migrants and Education: The Tensions of Education in Immigrant Societies and
among Migrant Groups. Dordrecht, The Netherlands; Boston, Mass.: Kluwer Academic,
2003: 115-131.
Tan, Liok Ee. “Descent and Identity: The Different Paths of Tan Cheng Lock, Tan Kah Kee
and Lim Lian Geok” Journal of the Malaysian Branch, Royal Asiatic Society 68, pt.1 (1995):
1-28.
Teoh, Karen M. “Domesticating Hybridity: Straits Chinese Cultural Heritage Projects in
Malaysia and Singapore” Cross-Currents: East Asian History and Culture Review 5, no. 1
(2016): 115–146.
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Tong, Chee Kiong. “The Chinese in Contemporary Malaysia” in Lian, Kwen Fee, (ed.) Race,
ethnicity, and the state in Malaysia and Singapore. Leiden: Brill, 2006: 95-119.
Tong, Chee Kiong. Rationalizing Religion: Religious Conversion, Revivalism and
Competition in Singapore Society Leiden: Brill, 2007. UniM Law KZ 200.95957 TONG
White, Nicholas J. “The Beginnings of Crony Capitalism: Business, Politics and Economic
Development in Malaysia, C. 1955-70” Modern Asian Studies 38, no. 2 (2004): 389-41.
Yow, Cheun Hoe. “Ethnic Chinese in Malaysian Citizenship: Gridlocked in Historical
Formation and Political Hierarchy” Asian Ethnicity 18, no. 3 (2017): 277–295.
38
12. Is Chinese Singaporean identity primarily a product of the government’s engineering
of culture (for example, in the promotion of Mandarin) or is it something that reflects
deep-seated cultural patterns and old loyalties to traditions?
Blackburn, Kevin “Disguised Anti-Colonialism: Protest Against the White Australia Policy
in Malaya and Singapore, 1947-1962” Australian Journal of International Affairs 55, no.1
(2001): 101-117.
Chang, Pi-Chun. “Rewriting Singapore and Rewriting Chineseness: Lee Guan Kin’s
Diasporic Stance” Asian Ethnicity 1 (Jan. 2015): 28–42.
Chi, Janine Kay Gwen. “National-ethnic Identity Negotiation in Malaysia and Singapore: A
State-Society Interaction Perspective” Berkeley Journal of Sociology 47 (2003): 49-75.
Chua, Beng Huat. “Multiculturalism in Singapore: An Instrument of Social Control” Race &
Class: A Journal for Black and Third World Liberation 44, no.3 (2003): 58-77.
Chua, Beng Huat. “Racial Singaporeans: Absence After the Hyphen” in Kahn, Joel S., (ed.)
Southeast Asian Identities: Culture and the Politics of Representation in Indonesia, Malaysia,
Singapore, and Thailand. New York: St. Martin's, 1998: 28-50.
Chua, Beng Huat. “Southeast Asia in Postcolonial Studies: An Introduction” Postcolonial
Studies 11, no.3 (2008): 231-240.
Chua, Beng Huat, (ed.). “Communitarian Politics in Asia” Communitarian Politics in Asia,
London; New York: Routledge Curzon, 2004.
Chua, Beng Huat; Yeo, Wei-Wei “Singapore Cinema: Eric Khoo and Jack Neo: Critique
from the Margins and the Mainstream” Inter-Asia Cultural Studies 4, no.1 (2003): 117-125.
Chua, Beng-Huat. Communitarian Ideology and Democracy in Singapore London: Routledge,
1997.UniM Archit High Use 959.5705 CHUA
Clammer, John “Framing the Other: Criminality, Social Exclusion and Social Engineering in
Developing Singapore” in Rodan, Garry, (ed.) Singapore. Aldershot, England; Burlington,
Vt.: Ashgate, 2001: 441-458.
Harper, T.N. “Globalism and the Pursuit of Authenticity: The Making of a Diasporic Public
Sphere in Singapore “Sojourn: Journal of Social Issues in Southeast Asia 12, no.2 (1997):
261-292.
Hong, Lysa; Hung, Jianli. The Scripting of a National History: Singapore and its Pasts Hong
Kong: Hong Kong University Press 2008. UniM Bail 959.570072 HONG
Hong, Lysa; Huang, Jianli. “The Scripting of Singapore’s National Heroes: Toying with
Pandora’s Box” in Abu Talib Ahmad; Tan, Lio Ee, (eds) New Terrains in Southeast Asian
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Huang, Jianli; Hong, Lysa. “Chinese Diasporic Culture and National Identity: The Taming of
the Tiger Balm Gardens in Singapore” Modern Asian Studies 41, pt.1 (2007): 41-76.
Huang, Jianli; Hong, Lysa. “History and Imaginaries of ‘Big Singapore’: Positioning the Sun
Yat Sen Nanyang Memorial Hall” Journal of Southeast Asian Studies 35, no.1 (2004): 65-89.
Kong, Lily; Yeoh, Brenda S.A. “Urban Conservation in Singapore: A Survey of State
Policies and Popular Attitudes” Urban Studies 31, no.2 (1994): 247-265.
Lai, Ah Eng. Meanings of Multiethnicity: A Case Study of Ethnicity and Ethnic Relations in
Singapore Kuala Lumpur; New York: Oxford University Press, 1995. 305.80095957 LAI
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Singapore: Times Academic Press, 1998. UniM Bail 959.51 LAU.
Liu, James H., et al. “Social Representations of History in Malaysia and Singapore: On the
Relationship Between National and Ethnic Identity” Asian Journal of Social Psychology 5,
no.1 (2002): 3-20.
Low, Adeline Hwee Cheng “The Past in the Present: Memories of the 1964 ‘Racial Riots’ in
Singapore” Asian Journal of Social Science 29, no.3 (2001): 431-455.
Loy, Hui Chieh; Wee, Liang Tong “History, Nation, and Singapore” History Journal
(Singapore) (1997): 6-12.
Montsion, Jean Michel; Parasram. Ajay. “The Little Nyonya and Singapore’s National Self:
Reflections on Aesthetics, Ethnicity and Postcolonial State Formation” Postcolonial Studies
21, no. 2 (2018): 154–171.
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Pereira, Alexius. “Triads and Riots: Threats to Singapore’s Social Stability” in Chan, Kwok
Bun andTong, Chee Kiong, (eds). Past Times: A Social History of Singapore. Singapore:
Times Editions, 2003:183-197.
Seah, Leander. “Chinese Identities between Localization and Globalization: The South Seas
Society, Chinese Intellectuals in Singapore, and Southeast Asian Studies, 1958-1971” China
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Tan, Eugene K.B. “We, the Citizens of Singapore’: Multiethnicity, its Evolution and its
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40
Taylor, Jeremy E. “Lychees and Mirrors: Local Opera, Cinema, and Diaspora in the Chinese
Cultural Cold War” Twentieth-Century China 43, no. 2 (2018): 163–181.
Yeoh, Brenda S.A.; Huang, Shirlena. “Strengthening the Nation’s Roots? Heritage Policies in
Singapore” in Lian, Kwen Fee; Tong, Chee Kiong, (eds) Social Policy in Post-industrial
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41
13. Chinese people in English-speaking white settler societies in the Pacific Rim (such as
Australia, the United States and New Zealand) were subjected to policies of racial
exclusion and other forms of discrimination between the 19th century and the middle
of the 20th century. To what extent did these policies leave Chinese people in a state
of permanent marginality and subordination in those societies, and to what extent did
Chinese people come to identify with those places as their homes, and build a
distinctive set of cultural identities that were associated with those places? How have
the struggle against racism and exclusion and the desire for full citizenship interacted
with the attempt to maintain Chinese culture and the creation of new kinds of
identities derived from experiences in those English-speaking white settler societies?
(Note: You can look at overall developments or you can choose to focus on one
country.)
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their Lives Albany, N.Y.: State University of New York Press, 1998. Unim
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Lui, Mary Ting Yi. The Chinatown Trunk Mystery: Murder, Miscegenation, and other
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Tong, Benson. The Chinese Americans Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press, 2000.Unim
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43
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Yin, Xiao-Huang. Chinese American Literature since the 1850s Urbana: University of
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Articles: USA and Hawai’i
Bao, Zhang. “Chinese Communists in the United States During the 1920s and 1930s”
Chinese America: History and Perspectives (2009): 1-11.
Baxter, R. Scott. “The Response of California's Chinese Populations to the Anti-Chinese
Movement” Historical Archaeology 42, no.3 (2008)ː 29-36
Bentz, Linda, and Todd J. Braje. “Chinese Abalone Merchants and Fishermen in Nineteenth-
Century Santa Barbara, California: A Study of Export Networks” Journal of Chinese
Overseas 14 (2018): 88–114.
Boime, Eric. “'Beating Plowshares into Swords': The Colorado River Delta, the Yellow Peril,
and the Movement for Federal Reclamation, 1901-1928” Pacific Historical Review 78, no.1
(2009)ː 27-53
Bow, Leslie. “Racial Interstitiality and the Anxieties of the 'Partly Colored': Representations
of Asian Under Jim Crow” Journal of Asian American Studies 10, no.1 (Feb 2007)ː 1-30
Braje, Todd J., and Linda Bentz. “The Archaeology of Overseas Chinese Abalone Fishermen
on Santa Rosa Island, Alta California” Journal of Chinese Overseas 11 (2015): 87–103.
Chan, Phillip; Uyeda Gin, Lynette Choy; Mar, Richard; Wyman, Nona Mock. “More than
Ninety Years of Bay Area History” Chinese America: History and Perspectives (2007)ː 267-
268
44
Chang, Gordon H. “'China and the Pursuit of America's Destiny: Nineteenth-Century
Imagining and why Immigration Restriction Took so Long'“ Journal of Asian American
Studies 15, no.2 (2012)ː 145-169.
Chang, Kornel. “Enforcing Transnational White Solidarity: Asian Migration and the
Formation of the U.S.-Canadian Boundary” American Quarterly 60, no.3 (2008)ː 671-696.
Chapman, Mary. “A 'Revolution in Ink': Sui Sin Far and Chinese Reform Discourse”
American Quarterly 60, no.4 (Dec 2008)ː 975-1001
Chen, Jeannie. “‘Strangers from a Different Shore’: Examining Archival Representations and
Descriptions of the Chinese in America” Journal of Chinese Overseas 15 (2019): 106–22.
Chen, Yajing, and Heidi Ross. “‘Creating a Home Away from Home’: Chinese
Undergraduate Student Enclaves in US Higher Education” Journal of Current Chinese
Affairs 44 (2015): 155–81.
Chen, Zhongping. “Kang Tongbi’s Pioneering Feminism and the First Transnational
Organization of Chinese Feminist Politics, 1903-1905” Twentieth-Century China 44, no. 1
(2019): 3–32.
Chen, Zhongping. “Kang Youwei's Activities in Canada and the Reformist
Movement among the Global Chinese Diaspora, 1899-1909” Twentieth-Century China 39,
no.1 (Jan 2014)ː 3-23
Chew, Kenneth; Leach, Mark; Liu, John M. “The Revolving Door to Gold Mountain How
Chinese Immigrants Got around U.S. Exclusion and Replenished the Chinese American
Labor Pool, 1900-1910” International Migration Review 43, no.2 (2009)ː 410-430.
Ching, May-Bo. “A Preliminary Study of the Theatres Built by Cantonese Merchants in the
Late Qing” Frontiers of History in China 5, no.2 (2010)ː 253-278
Cho, Yu-Fang. “'Yellow Slavery,' Narratives of Rescue, and Sui Sin Far / Edith Maude
Eaton's 'Lin John' (1899)” Journal of Asian American Studies 12, no.1 (Feb 2009)ː 35-63.
Cho, Yu-Fang. “Domesticating the Aliens within Sentimental Benevolence in Late-
Nineteenth-Century California Magazines” American Quarterly 61, no.1 (2009)ː 113-136
Chong, Douglas D.L. “Hawai'i's Nam Long” Chinese America: History and Perspectives
(2010)ː 13-21.
Chong, Douglas D.L. “The Chinese in Hawai'I” Chinese America: History and Perspectives
(2010)ː 51-59.
Cynn, Christine. “‘[T]He Ludicrous Transition of Gender and Sentiment’: Chinese Labor in
Ambrose Bierce’s ‘The Haunted Valley.’” Journal of Asian American Studies 19, no. 2
(2016): 237–62.
Feng, Jin. “With This Lingo, I Thee Wed: Language and Marriage in Autobiography of a
Chinese Woman” Journal of American-East Asian Relations 18, Nos.3-4 (2011)ː 235-247.
45
Fetzer, Joel. “Early Chinese-American Society As Portrayed in Chinese Letters of the Ah
Louis Family of San Luis Obispo, California, USA” Journal of Chinese Overseas 11, no.2
(2015)ː 199-215.
Fong, Kelly. “Nineteenth-Century Oakland Chinese Businesses” Chinese America: History
and Perspectives (2008)ː 69-90
Fowler, Josephine. “The Activism of Left-Wing and Communist Chinese Immigrants, 1927-
1933” in Chan, Sucheng and Hsu, Madeline Y. (eds). Chinese Americans and the Politics of
Race and Culture. Philadelphia, Penn.: Temple University Press, 2008: 91-131
Gao, Yunxiang. “Soo Yong (1903-1984): Hollywood Celebrity and Cultural Interpreter”
Journal of American-East Asian Relations 17, no.4 (2010)ː 372-399
Glick, Clarence E.; Glick, Doris L. “Changing Roles and Status Among Prominent Chinese
in Hawai'I Chinese America: History and Perspectives” (2010)ː 37-50.
Greenfield, Mary C. “'The Game of One Hundred Intelligences': Mahjong, Materials, and the
Marketing of the Asian Exotic in the 1920s” Pacific Historical Review 79, no.3 (Aug 2010)ː
329-359
Hannis, Grant. “A Comparative Analysis of Nineteenth-Century Californian and New
Zealand Newspaper Representations of Chinese Gold Miners” Journal of American-East
Asian Relations 18, Nos.3-4 (2011)ː 248-273.
Hsu, Madeline Y. “Befriending the Yellow Peril: Student Migration and the Warming of
American Attitudes Toward Chinese, 1905-1950” in Künnemann, Vanessa; Mayer, Ruth
(eds), Trans-Pacific Interactions: The United States and China, 1880-1950. New York and
Houndmills: Palgrave Macmillan, 2009. Pages: 105-122.
Hu-Dehart, Evelyn. “Chinatowns and Borderlands: Inter-Asian Encounters in the Diaspora”
Modern Asian Studies 46, Pt.2 (2012)ː 425-451.
Hung, Winnie Tam. “Dowries and Debts: Fuzhounese Youth Geographies of Fear,
Resentment, and Obligation” Journal of Asian American Studies 18, no. 1 (2015): 11–40.
Lai, Him Mark and Hsu, Madeline Y. “History of Meizhou Gongyi Tongmeng Zonghui”
(Unionist Guild of America). Chinese America: History and Perspectives (2008): 25-27
Lai, Him Mark. “Anarchism, Communism, and China's Nationalist Revolution” in Lai, Him
Mark [Author]; Hsu, Madeline Y. (ed.). Chinese American Transnational Politics. Urbana:
University of Illinois Press, 2010. Pages: 53-76.
Lai, Him Mark. “Chinese Guilds in the Apparel Industry of San Francisco” Chinese America:
History and Perspectives (2008)ː 17-23.
Lai, Him Mark. “The Chinese Community Press in Hawai'i” Chinese America: History and
Perspectives (2010)ː 95-103
46
Lai, James S. “Shifting Political Terrains in ‘The City by the Bay’: Mayor Ed Lee and the
Two Convergences of San Francisco Politics” Journal of Chinese Overseas 12 (2016): 183–
215.
Lam, Lap. “Tung Pok Chin A Paper Son Poet in New York” Frontiers of Literary Studies in
China 9, no. 4 (2015): 635–65.
Larson, Jane Leung. “The 1905 Anti-American Boycott as a Transnational Chinese
Movement” Chinese America: History and Perspectives (2007)ː 191-198.
Lee, Julia H. “The Railroad as Message in Maxine Hong Kingston’s China Men and Frank
Chin’s ‘Riding the Rails with Chickencoop Slim.’” Journal of Asian American Studies 18, no.
3 (2015): 265–87.
Lew-Williams, Beth. “Before Restriction Became Exclusion: America’s Experiment in
Diplomatic Immigration Control” Pacific Historical Review 83, no. 1 (2014): 24–56.
Li, Wei, Wan Yu, Claudia Sadowski-Smith, and Hao Wang. “Intellectual Migration and
Brain Circulation: Conceptual Framework and Empirical Evidence” Journal of Chinese
Overseas 11 (2015): 43–58.
Liang, Zai, and Qian Song. “From the Culture of Migration to the Culture of Remittances:
Evidence from Immigrant-Sending Communities in China” Chinese Sociological Review 50
(2018): 163–87.
Ling, Huping. “Chinese Chicago: Transnational Migration and Businesses, 1870s-1930s”
Journal of Chinese Overseas 6, no.2 (2010)ː 250-285.
Ling, Huping. “The Transnational World of Chinese Entrepreneurs in Chicago, 1870s to
1940s: New Sources and Perspectives on Southern Chinese Emigration” Frontiers of History
in China 6, no.3 (Sep 2011)ː 370-406
Liu, Haiming; Lin, Lianlian. “Food, Culinary Identity, and Transnational Culture: Chinese
Restaurant Business in Southern California” Journal of Asian American Studies 12, no.2 (Jun
2009)ː 135-162
Liu, Lisong. “Chinese Student Migrants and American Religious Organizations” Journal of
Chinese Overseas 12 (2016): 122–53.
Loh, Yen Li. “Ghosts, Marriage, and Madness: The Immigrant Symbolic, Pregnancy as
Feminine Epistemology, and the Death Drive in Maxine Hong Kingston’s The Woman
Warrior” Journal of Asian American Studies 21, no. 2 (2018): 209–37.
Louie, Andrea. “Reassessing Chinese American Identities: How Adoptees and American
Born Chinese (ABCs) Negotiate Chineseness” Journal of Chinese Overseas 14 (2018): 182–
215.
Merz-Benz, Peter-Ulrich. “The Chinese Laundryman: A Model for the Social Type of the
Sojourner--and a Living Transcultural Phenomenon” Asiatische Studien 64, no.1 (2010)ː 89-
100
47
Metraux, Daniel A. “How Bret Harte's Satirical Poem 'The Heathen Chinee' Helped Inflame
Racism in 1870s America” Southeast Review of Asian Studies 33 (2011)ː 173-178
Miao, Wei. “Gender and the Representation of Chinese Intellectual Migration to the United
States in China’s Reform and Opening-up Era” Journal of Chinese Overseas 11 (2015): 59–
71.
Miao, Wei. “Representation of Diasporic Chinese Wen Masculinities in A Native of Beijing
in New York and A Free Life” Journal of Chinese Overseas 14 (2018): 5–21.
O, Hosok. “Central Pacific Railroad Company: Experiences of Chinese in the Construction of
the First Transcontinental Railroad” American Review of China Studies 11, no.2 (2010)ː 55-
73.
On, Steve. “Reflection: Chinatown Old and New” Asian Ethnicity 13, no.2 (Mar 2012)ː 205-
207
Rast, Raymond W. “The Cultural Politics of Tourism in San Francisco's Chinatown, 1882-
1917” Pacific Historical Review 76, no.1 (2007)ː 29-60.
Schrecker, John. “'For the Equality of Men--For the Equality of Nations': Anson Burlingame
and China's First Embassy to the United States, 1868” Journal of American-East Asian
Relations 17, no.1 (2010)ː 9-34
Song, Ping. “Small World, Big World: The Cultural Possibility of a Chinese Transnational
Grassroots Society” Asian Anthropology 16, no. 2 (2017): 95–115.
Soong, Irma Tam. “Christianity and Dr. Sun Yat-Sen's Schooling in Hawai'i, 1879-83”
Chinese America: History and Perspectives (2010)ː 75-86
Tran, Sharon. “Asian Sybils and Stinky Multispecies Assemblages: Ecofeminist Departures
for Asian American Studies” Journal of Asian American Studies 21, no. 3 (2018): 453–80.
Twelbeck, Kirsten. “The Donaldina Cameron Myth and the Rescue of America, 1910-2002”
in Künnemann, Vanessa and Mayer, Ruth (eds). Chinatowns in a Transnational World:
Myths and Realities of An Urban Phenomenon. New York; London: Routledge, 2011. Pages:
135-162
Voss, Barbara L. “‘Every Element of Womanhood with Which to Make Life a Curse or
Blessing’: Missionary Women’s Accounts of Chinese American Women’s Lives in
Nineteenth-Century Pre-Exclusion California” Journal of Asian American Studies 21, no. 1
(2018): 105–34.
Welch, Ian. “'Our Neighbors but not our Countrymen': Christianity and the Chinese in
Nineteenth-Century Victoria (Australia) and California” Journal of American-East Asian
Relations 13 (2004-2006)ː 149-183”
Wickberg, Edgar. “Contemporary Overseas Chinese Ethnicity in the Pacific Region” Chinese
America: History and Perspectives (2010)ː 133-141
48
Wong, K. Scott. “Between the 'Mountain of Tang' and the 'Adopted Land': The Chinese
American Identities in the Face of Exclusion” in Künnemann, Vanessa and Mayer, Ruth (eds).
Trans-Pacific Interactions: The United States and China, 1880-1950. New York; Houndmills,
Basingstoke, Hampshire, England: Palgrave Macmillan, 2009. Pages: 123-137
Yang, Fan. “Fiscal Orientalism: China Panic, the Indebted Citizen, and the Spectacle of
National Debt” Journal of Asian American Studies 19, no. 3 (2016): 375–96.
Zhang, Cynthia Baiqing. “The Ecological Impact on Bonding and Religious Identity: A Case
of Chinese Graduate Students in Two Sociocultural Contexts in the United States” Review of
Religion and Chinese Society 4 (2017): 32–58.
Zhang, Tao. “The Start of American Accommodation of the Chinese: Afong Moy’s
Experience from 1834 to 1850” Journal of American Studies 49, no. 3 (2015): 475–503.
Zhu, Zheng. “Making the ‘Invisible’ a ‘Visible Problem’: The Representation of Chinese
Illegal Immigrants in U.S. Newspapers” Journal of Chinese Overseas 10 (2014): 61–90
Articles: Australia and New Zealand
Anderson, Christopher and Mitchell, Norman. “Kubara: A Kuku-Yalanji View of the Chinese
in North Queensland” Aboriginal History 5 (1981): 21-38
Ang, Ien. “Not yet Post-Asia: Paradoxes of Identity and Knowledge in Transitional Times”
Asian Cinema 25 (2014): 125–37.
Bagnall, Kate. “'I am Nearly Heartbroken about Him': Stories of Australian Mothers'
Separation from Their 'Chinese' Children” History Australia 1, no. 1 (2003): 30-40.
Bagnall, Kate. “Rewriting the History of Chinese Families in Nineteenth-Century Australia”
Australian Historical Studies .42, no.1 (Mar 2011): 62-77.
Bowen, Alister. “The Merchants: Chinese Social Organisation in Colonial Australia”
Australian Historical Studies 42, no.1 (2011): 25-44.
Cai, Tian Ming. “The History of the Chung Wah Association, 1909-1925” Early Days:
Journal of the Royal Western Australian Historical Society 11, no. 4 (1998): 496-509.
Chase, Athol. “'All Kind of Nation': Aborigines and Asians in Cape York Peninsula”
Aboriginal History 5 (1981): 7-20.
Chua, McAndrew. “The Racial Politics of Public Health in 1910's Darwin Chinatown”
Journal of Northern Territory History21 (2010): 59-78.
Chung, Hilary. “Chineseness in (a) New Zealand Life: Lynda Chanwai-Earle” New Zealand
Journal of Asian Studies 16, no. 2 (2014): 173–94.
Couchman, Sophie. “'Then in the Distance Quong Tart Did We See': Quong Tart, Celebrity
and Photography” Journal of Australian Colonial History, Vol. 8 (2006): 159-182.
49
Couchman, Sophie. “Making the 'Last Chinaman': Photography and Chinese as a 'Vanishing'
People in Australia's Rural Local Histories” Australian Historical Studies no.1 (2011): 78-91.
Crissman, Lawrence W.; Beattie, George; Selby, James. “The Segmentation and Integration
of the Chinese in Brisbane, Australia” Journal of Comparative Family Studies 16, no.2
(Summer 1985): 181-203.
Darnell, Maxine. “Life and Labour for Indentured Chinese Shepherds in New South Wales,
1847-55” in Special “Active Voices, Hidden Histories: The Chinese in Colonial Australia”
Journal of Australian Colonial History, Vol. 6 (2004): 137-158.
Davies, Gloria. “Liang Qichao in Australia: A Sojourn of No Significance?” East Asian
History 21 (2001): 65-110.
Edwards, Louise. “Victims, Apologies, and the Chinese in Australia” Journal of Chinese
Overseas 15 (2019): 62–88.
Elleray, Michelle. “Hell for White Men: Masculinity and Race in the Fortunes of Richard
Mahony” Postcolonial Studies 13, no.1 (Mar 2010)ː 71-90
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