Heteroglossic Asia presents an analysis of geographic, historical, cultural, economic, spatial and political factors underlying Taiwan's maritime urbanity by means of case studies based on Taipei and Kaohsiung; two cities which represent the multi-accentual character of Taiwan's urban environment and its recent changes and development through architecture.

Focussing on the concept of a heteroglossic Asia Pacific, exemplified by the analysis of Taiwan's urban transformation, the study argues that Taiwan's urban environment shows a form of intended "fuzziness" which cannot be described as resting on either a simplified nationalist base or chaotic societal anxiety. Rather, this form lies between binary poles: autocracy and democracy, nation state and day-to-day life, top-down and bottom-up orientations, orthodoxy and hybridisation.



Autorentext

Francis Chia-Hui Lin, PhD is a Lecturer in the School of Architecture, Building & Design at Taylor's University, Malaysia. His areas of expertise lie in the critical discourse on the practice and profession of architecture and urbanism within a wider context of history and theory. Francis's research and teaching interests include the Asia Pacific region, architectural and urban history, theory, art theory, architectural and urban design, (post)colonialism, the humanities and cultural history.



Inhalt

1. A Quasi-Colonial Context, 2. Hong Kong, 3. Singapore, 4. Taiwan, 5. When the Otherness becomes Selfness, 6. Theorising Urban Architecture for the Asia Pacific, 7. A Paradigm of the Contemporary Urban Asia Pacific, Conclusion

Titel
Heteroglossic Asia
Untertitel
The Transformation of Urban Taiwan
EAN
9781317626374
ISBN
978-1-317-62637-4
Format
ePUB
Herausgeber
Veröffentlichung
09.01.2015
Digitaler Kopierschutz
Adobe-DRM
Dateigrösse
2.49 MB
Anzahl Seiten
186
Jahr
2015
Untertitel
Englisch