The not-so-great rapprochement: Taming and consuming Chiang Kai-shek in the era of cross-strait rapprochement tourism
Issued Date
2022-04-01
Resource Type
ISSN
20517084
eISSN
20517092
Scopus ID
2-s2.0-85130927999
Journal Title
East Asian Journal of Popular Culture
Volume
8
Issue
1
Start Page
109
End Page
130
Rights Holder(s)
SCOPUS
Bibliographic Citation
East Asian Journal of Popular Culture Vol.8 No.1 (2022) , 109-130
Suggested Citation
Zhang J.J., Ohlendorf H. The not-so-great rapprochement: Taming and consuming Chiang Kai-shek in the era of cross-strait rapprochement tourism. East Asian Journal of Popular Culture Vol.8 No.1 (2022) , 109-130. 130. doi:10.1386/eapc_00065_1 Retrieved from: https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/20.500.14594/86993
Title
The not-so-great rapprochement: Taming and consuming Chiang Kai-shek in the era of cross-strait rapprochement tourism
Author(s)
Author's Affiliation
Other Contributor(s)
Abstract
This article seeks to examine the interplay of material culture and identity politics during what we call the Great Rapprochement Era between China and Taiwan. It focuses on how the government and non-state actors dealt with sensitive histories and difficult heritages as manifested in their taming of Chiang Kai-shek for cross-strait tourists’ consumption. The article argues that as much as both governments strove to put ‘economics before politics’, there was evidently a great deal of political work that went into making an ‘inconvenient’ past more ‘palatable’. Discussion shows that despite the depoliticization of difficult heritages, and the domestication, commercialization and cartoonization of sensitive historical figures as manifested in tourism products, these practices were inherently political.