Showing posts with label Taiwan culture. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Taiwan culture. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 24, 2013

The Chickenshit Society

Caught this cool bee with lime-green stripes in a field near my house.

Indeed, it was doubtless in Germany that chickenshit reached its wartime apogee. Consider the activities devised for the inmates of camps like Bergen-Belsen and Auschwitz -- digging holes to fill in again, endless "roll calls" in freezing weather with the dead falling in place: these are merely chickenshit raised to the highest power. - Paul M. Fussell, Wartime.

A few posts below this one I blogged on Death by Chickenshit, quoting Fussell. Yet, chickenshit shapes how authority everywhere in Taiwan culture acts, one of the darker legacies of its links to China. It's one I have long wanted to discuss, but frankly, have been afraid to. A couple of paragraphs in a Taipei Times report on the Dapu Demolition caught my eye because of the classic chickenshit move:
The groups said the county government even asked one of the homeowners to pay a disposal fee of about NT$242,000 — approximately the same amount as the owner received in compensation for the land expropriation.

They said the request laid bare the “brutal and intentional bullying” nature of the Miaoli County Government.
Yes, knocking down someone's house because you want to round off a science park and then charging them to have the debris removed, that is a classic chickenshit move. It is the Taiwan construction-industrial state equivalent of the Chinese security state's classic chickenshit move of sending the families of executed criminals a bill for the bullet that killed their loved one. The State added the bonus chickenshit move of wrecking the houses with their things still inside, then piled on even more chickenshit by arresting a protester for chanting (J Michael has an excellent full report here). The recent demolition of the Huaguang Community produced a similar flow of amazing chickenshit -- like fining and suing the people who didn't or couldn't move, wiping them out financially.

But... chickenshit is everywhere. In the extra work loaded onto students, especially in senior high, but the torment extends throughout the System, teaching the young the true meaning of arbitrary, unchecked power. In the immense quantities of wasteful paperwork -- like at a university where I once worked, for the teacher evaluation we were required to download information stored in the university computers, print it out, and hand it to the authorities in printed form. In the meetings where leaders ramble on, unchecked -- chickenshit loves to hear itself talk. In the petty punishments meted out to underlings of every stripe -- students, employees, even children by parents. We foreigners in Taiwan are often protected from the full flow of chickenshit. But imagine for a minute how it shapes the lives of the Taiwanese....

UPDATE: The kind of chickenshit that dominates the Huaguang case, in which a semi-legal community of squatters have occupied government land for decades is being pushed off to make way for big developers to make big bucks, is on display here:
Yu said the house he has lived in for more than 30 years was bought from a friend and the transaction was completed after filing for registration at the Daan District Office.

“Although I did not own the land, the house was mine,” Yu said.

Therefore, Yu said he does not understand why he was found by the ministry to be illegally profiting from occupying the land.

After the ministry won a lawsuit, the court ordered forfeiture of one-third of his youngest son’s salary to pay legal costs of NT$130,000.

In addition to a fine of NT$2 million (US$66,862), Yu must pay NT$110,000 for the dismantling of his house if he fails to demolish it by the deadline.
The community was put on the land by government officials years ago. There were actually many empty houses in Taipei at the time these people came over with Chiang in 1949, but they were occupied by high-ranking KMT members and similar powerful types. Hoi polloi like Yu were left to fend for themselves.
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Tuesday, July 31, 2012

Most Awesome Video Ever

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Wednesday, May 25, 2011

Fallows on "Taiwanese" Soft Power

James Fallows, longtime reporter and commentator, writes on NextMedia Animation:
In the most recent of my frequent paeans to Next Media Animation of Taiwan, I mentioned that the relatively small population of Taiwan was enjoying considerable creative and pop culture influence now -- especially compared with mainland China -- with resulting "soft power" benefits for Taiwan in general. (The latest NMA animation, by the way, is about the pending SF ban on circumcision.) A reader with a Chinese name has an explanation...
The "reader's" explanation sounded plausible but the final two lines should set off your alarm bells as to what desires are shaping his interpretations.

More interesting question: just what the heck is Taiwanese soft power anyway? Is NMA an example of it?

NMA is owned by Jimmy Lai from Hong Kong and is a company from outside Taiwan. Its world-renowned animations are on popular topics in the west and the animations that become famous do not introduce local political or cultural stuff to the outside world. To the extent that it raises Taiwan's image in the world it represents a positive force, but I'm hesitant to label it Taiwanese soft power. It is more like a typical innovative Taiwan OEM operation that happens to produce animations rather than electronics. In that sense it is quality-manufacturing-as-soft power in the way that our world-famous bike and electronics and machinery industries are soft power.

Where does Taiwan's soft power reside? In the millions of Taiwanese who travel, study, live and work outside Taiwan. In the experience of people who come here and fall in love with the place. In the export of things like bubble tea. In second generation locals of Taiwanese descent all over the world. In our excellent manufacturing reputation. In our historical links to outside colonizers.

Fallows' reader points to the cross-pollination of the popular entertainment industry in Taiwan, Korea, Japan and China. Pop entertainment in those cultures is largely the same shallow artificial construct of cash, song formulas, and plastic surgery. Is the effect of pop culture NMA as powerful as, say, daily interaction with the hundreds of thousands of Taiwanese who live overseas or the thousands of small- and medium-sized businesses who act as suppliers to the global supply chain? Where would you locate Taiwanese soft power?
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Don't miss the comments below! And check out my blog and its sidebars for events, links to previous posts and picture posts, and scores of links to other Taiwan blogs and forums! Delenda est, baby.

Thursday, May 05, 2011

What symbolizes Taiwan?

I gave the 100 first-year students a five paragraph essay assignment that asked them to name three things that symbolized Taiwan to them and explain why it symbolized Taiwan. Here is what they picked. The number indicates how many times (out of three hundred possible) that item was selected:

night markets ….. 49  
Taipei 101 ….. 31
food ….. 11
friendly people ….. 10
Mazu ….. 9
stinky tofu ….. 9
Yu Shan ….. 8
scenery ….. 8
pearl milk tea ….. 7
national health insurance system ….. 6
fruits ….. 6
Chopsticks ….. 5
Chinese New Year ….. 5
agriculture ….. 5
traditional religion ….. 5
Taiwanese Festivals ….. 5
Ali Shan ….. 5
temples ….. 4
aboriginal people ….. 4
bicycling ….. 4
Red Envelope ….. 3
election culture ….. 3
computers ….. 3
sweet potatoes ….. 3
national palace museum ….. 3
butterflies ….. 3
Calligraphy ….. 2
animals ….. 2
2-28 incident ….. 2
pig's blood cake ….. 2
sun moon lake ….. 2
chinese characters ….. 2
taroko gorge ….. 2
hot springs ….. 2
black bear ….. 2
dragons ….. 1
hand puppets ….. 1
Spring Scream ….. 1
music concerts ….. 1
beehive fireworks ….. 1
sky lanterns ….. 1
plum flowers ….. 1
dragon boats ….. 1
protesting ….. 1
department stores ….. 1
betel nut ….. 1
cops ….. 1
made in taiwan ….. 1
rice ….. 1
danshui old street ….. 1
Wenhua ….. 1
architecture ….. 1
convenience stores ….. 1
OEM manufacturing ….. 1
culture of taiwan ….. 1
traditional crafts ….. 1
Mid Autumn Festival ….. 1
traditional markets ….. 1
seafood ….. 1
oyster omlet ….. 1
Taiwanese language ….. 1
special drinks ….. 1
tung blossom festival ….. 1
hakka culture ….. 1
kenting ….. 1
chicken steak ….. 1
bananas ….. 1
Acer ….. 1
spotted deer ….. 1
anping fort ….. 1
convenient traffic ….. 1
four god soup ….. 1
folklore ….. 1
old streets ….. 1
national parks ….. 1
useless government ….. 1
plastic bag ….. 1
HSR ….. 1
betel nut girls ….. 1
nuclear power plants ….. 1
tea ….. 1
tea shops ….. 1
China-Taiwan relations` ….. 1

Best line from an introductory paragraph:
"When people talk about countries, they may think about something that symbolizes the countries. The beer and bangers symbolize Germany. Tap dancing symbolizes Scotland."
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Don't miss the comments below! And check out my blog and its sidebars for events, links to previous posts and picture posts, and scores of links to other Taiwan blogs and forums! Delenda est, baby.