Island Fantasia: Imagining Subjects on the Military Frontline between China and Taiwan
The Matsu archipelago between China and Taiwan, for long an isolated outpost off southeast China, was suddenly transformed into a military frontline in 1949 by the Cold War and the Communist-Nationalist conflict. The army occupied the islands, commencing more than 40 long years of military rule. With the lifting of martial law in 1992, the people were confronted with the question of how to move forward. This in-depth ethnography and social history of the islands focuses on how individual citizens redefined themselves and reimagined their society. Drawing on long-term fieldwork, Wei-Ping Lin shows how islanders used both traditional and new media to cope with the conflicts and trauma of harsh military rule. She discusses the formation of new social imaginaries through the appearance of 'imagining subjects', interrogating their subjectification processes and varied uses of mediating technologies as they seek to answer existential questions. This title is Open Access.
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Island Fantasia: Imagining Subjects on the Military Frontline between China and Taiwan
The Matsu archipelago between China and Taiwan, for long an isolated outpost off southeast China, was suddenly transformed into a military frontline in 1949 by the Cold War and the Communist-Nationalist conflict. The army occupied the islands, commencing more than 40 long years of military rule. With the lifting of martial law in 1992, the people were confronted with the question of how to move forward. This in-depth ethnography and social history of the islands focuses on how individual citizens redefined themselves and reimagined their society. Drawing on long-term fieldwork, Wei-Ping Lin shows how islanders used both traditional and new media to cope with the conflicts and trauma of harsh military rule. She discusses the formation of new social imaginaries through the appearance of 'imagining subjects', interrogating their subjectification processes and varied uses of mediating technologies as they seek to answer existential questions. This title is Open Access.
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Overview

The Matsu archipelago between China and Taiwan, for long an isolated outpost off southeast China, was suddenly transformed into a military frontline in 1949 by the Cold War and the Communist-Nationalist conflict. The army occupied the islands, commencing more than 40 long years of military rule. With the lifting of martial law in 1992, the people were confronted with the question of how to move forward. This in-depth ethnography and social history of the islands focuses on how individual citizens redefined themselves and reimagined their society. Drawing on long-term fieldwork, Wei-Ping Lin shows how islanders used both traditional and new media to cope with the conflicts and trauma of harsh military rule. She discusses the formation of new social imaginaries through the appearance of 'imagining subjects', interrogating their subjectification processes and varied uses of mediating technologies as they seek to answer existential questions. This title is Open Access.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781009010405
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Publication date: 10/07/2021
Series: Taiwan Studies
Pages: 250
Product dimensions: 5.91(w) x 9.02(h) x 0.71(d)

About the Author

Wei-Ping Lin is Professor of Anthropology at National Taiwan University. She has previously held affiliations at the Harvard-Yenching Institute and the Fairbank Center for Chinese Studies at Harvard University. She is the author of Materializing Magic Power: Chinese Popular Religion in Villages and Cities (2015) which won the Academia Sinica Scholarly Monograph Award in the Humanities and Social Sciences. She edited Mediating Religion: Music, Image, Object and New Media (2018; in Chinese).

Table of Contents

Introduction: Imagining subject; Part I. History of the Matsu Archipelago: 1. Forbidden outpost; 2. Becoming a military frontline; 3. To leave or to stay?; 4. Gambling with the military state; Part II. New Technologies of Imagination: 5. Digital Matsu; 6. Online war memory; Part III. Fantasia of the Future: 7. Women and families in transition; 8. Community materialized through temple building; 9. Novel religious practices as imaginative works; 10. A dream of an 'Asian Mediterranean'; Conclusion: Becoming ourselves.
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