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Fall 2020

 

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Chinese (CHN)
308 Friendly, 541-346-4041
East Asian Languages & Literatures
College of Arts & Sciences
Course Data
  CHN 308   Lit Modern Taiwan >1 >GP >IC 4.00 cr.
Surveys the literature of Taiwan from the postwar era to the present. Discussion focuses on national identity, gender, class, modernization, and globalization. Taught in English.
Grading Options: Optional; see degree guide or catalog for degree requirements
Instructor: Groppe AE-mailHomepage Office:   317 Friendly Hall
Phone:   (541) 346-7015
Office Hours: 1330 - 1430 W  
  1500 - 1600 T  
See CRN for CommentsPrereqs/Comments: Prereq: WR 121 or equivalent.
Course Materials
 
  CRN Avail Max Time Day Location Instructor Notes
  16836 6 30 1415-1545 tr 00 REMOTE Groppe A !
Academic Deadlines
Deadline     Last day to:
September 27:   Process a complete drop (100% refund, no W recorded)
October 3:   Drop this course (100% refund, no W recorded; after this date, W's are recorded)
October 3:   Process a complete drop (90% refund, no W recorded; after this date, W's are recorded)
October 4:   Process a complete withdrawal (90% refund, W recorded)
October 4:   Withdraw from this course (100% refund, W recorded)
October 5:   Add this course
October 5:   Last day to change to or from audit
October 11:   Process a complete withdrawal (75% refund, W recorded)
October 11:   Withdraw from this course (75% refund, W recorded)
October 18:   Process a complete withdrawal (50% refund, W recorded)
October 18:   Withdraw from this course (50% refund, W recorded)
October 25:   Process a complete withdrawal (25% refund, W recorded)
October 25:   Withdraw from this course (25% refund, W recorded)
November 15:   Withdraw from this course (0% refund, W recorded)
December 2:   Change grading option for this course
Caution You can't drop your last class using the "Add/Drop" menu in DuckWeb. Go to the “Completely Withdraw from Term/University” link to begin the complete withdrawal process. If you need assistance with a complete drop or a complete withdrawal, please contact the Office of Academic Advising, 101 Oregon Hall, 541-346-3211 (8 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday through Friday). If you are attempting to completely withdraw after business hours, and have difficulty, please contact the Office of Academic Advising the next business day.

Expanded Course Description
Taiwan, the largest island off the coast of China, has been settled by southern Chinese for four hundred years. However, since 1895, Taiwan has not belonged to the same political entity as mainland China except for the brief period between 1945 and 1949. The political separation of a century has contributed to different economic, social, and cultural realities on the two sides of the Taiwan Strait. While Taiwanese writers do draw on the classical Chinese literary heritage, they often articulate aspirations and concerns quite different from those of the writers on the mainland. This course will survey literary developments on the island of Taiwan from the Japanese colonial era to the present, during which period the central cultural question that concerns the Taiwanese people in general and writers in particular is that of identity. After having been colonized by the Japanese for fifty years, the ethnic Chinese people residing in Taiwan jubilantly returned to Chinese sovereignty in 1945, only to find themselves treated as second-class citizens. In 1949, the Nationalist party (KMT) led by Chiang Kai-shek fled the mainland and chose Taiwan as its temporary haven after being defeated by the Communists in a civil war. A new set of challenges then arose in Taiwan: how to forge a collective identity among a multi-dialectal population with disparate histories and recent experiences. While most of the population spoke southern Chinese dialects (chiefly Hokkien and Hakka), along with Chiang Kai-shek came a new infusion of mainland immigrants who could not comprehend such dialects. For several decades, Chiang was to impose martial law and a uniform Chinese identity on the residents of Taiwan through the education, propaganda, and police systems. However, with the abrogation of martial law in 1987 during Chiang's son's presidency and increasing democratization, the majority of Taiwan¿s citizens now understand their land to be a multiethnic and multicultural entity composed of diverse Chinese groups as well as aboriginal peoples of Austronesian heritage, which is de facto independent from the People's Republic of China. Writers, along with other intellectuals, have been key players in the debate over national identity in Taiwan. This course will examine their explorations of the effects of colonialism and imperialism, the rise of a Taiwanese national consciousness, and other issues, such as gender relations, class, the pains of modernization, and globalization.
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