Representing atrocity in Taiwan : the 2/28 incident and white terror in fiction and film
著者
書誌事項
Representing atrocity in Taiwan : the 2/28 incident and white terror in fiction and film
(Global Chinese culture)
Columbia University Press, c2007
- : cloth
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注記
Includes bibliographical references (p. [215]-233) and index
内容説明・目次
内容説明
In 1945, Taiwan was placed under the administrative control of the Republic of China, and after two years, accusations of corruption and a failing economy sparked a local protest that was brutally quashed by the Kuomintang government. The February Twenty-Eighth (or 2/28) Incident led to four decades of martial law that became known as the White Terror. During this period, talk of 2/28 was forbidden and all dissent violently suppressed, but since the lifting of martial law in 1987, this long-buried history has been revisited through commemoration and narrative, cinema and remembrance. Drawing on a wealth of secondary theoretical material as well as her own original research, Sylvia Li-chun Lin conducts a close analysis of the political, narrative, and ideological structures involved in the fictional and cinematic representations of the 2/28 Incident and White Terror. She assesses the role of individual and collective memory and institutionalized forgetting, while underscoring the dangers of re-creating a historical past and the risks of trivialization.
She also compares her findings with scholarly works on the Holocaust and the aftermath of the atomic bombings of Japan, questioning the politics of forming public and personal memories and the political teleology of "closure." This is the first book to be published in English on the 2/28 Incident and White Terror and offers a valuable matrix of comparison for studying the portrayal of atrocity in a specific locale.
目次
Acknowledgments Note on Chinese Words and Names Prologue: Looking Backward Part I. Literary Representation 1. Ethnicity and Atrocity 2. Documenting the Past 3. Engendering Victimhood Part II. Cinematic Re-creation 4. Past Versus Present 5. Screening Atrocity 6. Memory as Redemption Epilogue: Looking Forward Notes Bibliography Index
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