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Despite this, the author maintains the claim Taiwan is Chinese becomes, and adopts a tendency to ascribe to Taiwanese facets of the Chinese experience. Eg: The Chinese Exclusionary Act, which is a non-issue to Taiwanese. Taiwanese were not trying to emigrate to the US during the 19th century.
Likewise, claims that Islamic influences have reached Taiwan just as in China (hence the proliferation of Islamic restaurants run by immigrants from Taiwan), is grossly exaggerated. There was no Islamic influence, until after 1949, when the KMT brought relocated its Chinese population to Taiwan after losing the Chinese Civil War. (That brought to Taiwan a small population of Chinese Moslems, some of whom have then relocated to the US, and opened up the aforementioned restaurants).
The differences in language, views, perspectives, and identity between the group of Taiwanese on the island prior to 1949, and the new immigrants to Taiwan (often called "mainlanders") are vast, but again minimized or ignored by the author in his drive to assign Taiwanese to the Chinese fold.
All in all, this book is not just dull and uninspired, but uninformed and misleading.
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Buy one from zShops for: $31.60
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Used price: $31.47
Despite this, the author maintains the claim that Taiwan is Chinese, and adopts a tendency to ascribe to Taiwanese facets of the Chinese experience. Eg: The Chinese Exclusionary Act, which is a non-issue to Taiwanese. Taiwanese were not trying to emigrate to the US during the 19th century, and were unaffected by the Act.
Likewise, claims that Islamic influences have reached Taiwan just as in China (so even Islamic restaurants are run by immigrants from Taiwan) are grossly exaggerated. There was no Islamic influence, until after 1949, when the KMT brought relocated its Chinese population to Taiwan after losing the Chinese Civil War. (That brought to Taiwan a small population of Chinese Moslems, some of whom have then relocated to the US,and opened up the aforementioned restaurants).
The differences in language, views, perspectives, and identity between the group of Taiwanese on the island prior to 1949, and the new immigrants to Taiwan (often called "mainlanders") are vast, but again minimized or ignored by the author in his drive to assign Taiwanese to the Chinese fold.
All in all, this book is not just dull and uninspired, but uninformed and misleading.