The Pandemic and its Repercussions on Taiwan, its Identity, and Liberal Democracy

IF 0.5 Q3 CULTURAL STUDIES
Juan Alberto Ruiz Casado
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Abstract The situation generated by the pandemic has meant the acceleration of the ongoing hegemonic clash between the United States and China, as well as the intensification of the anti-China narrative and a deplorable wave of Sinophobia throughout the world. In this context, Taiwan has become a strategic hot spot for the development of the rhetoric of the enemy. This study analyses some of the direct consequences of the ensuing friend/foe discourses in the Taiwanese milieu. In the context of a new Cold War, certain groups of power and their media apparatuses have embarked into a race to discursively distance the country as quickly as possible from the despised global enemy, not to be dragged down by the proximity and commonalities shared with China. Moreover, social polarization within Taiwan and contempt for the internal “enemies” pose an added challenge both for the maintenance of liberal democracy and the preservation of peace and self-government on the island. These outcomes are facilitated by underlying populist and nationalist processes of identity construction and hegemonic struggle: distinct discourses re-articulating the Taiwanese identity as an underdog people and a victimized nation.
大流行病及其对台湾、台湾身份和自由民主的影响
摘要疫情造成的局势意味着美国和中国之间持续的霸权冲突的加速,以及反华叙事的加剧和全世界令人遗憾的恐华浪潮。在这种背景下,台湾已成为发展敌我言论的战略热点。本研究分析了台湾环境中随之而来的朋友/敌人话语的一些直接后果。在新冷战的背景下,某些大国集团及其媒体机构开始了一场竞赛,以尽可能快地与被鄙视的全球敌人拉开距离,而不是被与中国的接近和共同点所拖累。此外,台湾内部的社会两极分化和对内部“敌人”的蔑视对维护自由民主和维护岛上的和平与自治构成了额外的挑战。这些结果是由身份建构和霸权斗争的潜在民粹主义和民族主义过程促成的:不同的话语重新阐明了台湾作为弱势民族和受害国家的身份。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Open Cultural Studies
Open Cultural Studies CULTURAL STUDIES-
CiteScore
0.80
自引率
0.00%
发文量
18
审稿时长
15 weeks
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