Taiwan: A Political History FROM THE PUBLISHER
For centuries, various great powers have both exploited and benefited Taiwan, their designs for this island frequently clashing with the desire of local inhabitants to control their own destiny. Such conflicts have shaped Taiwan's multiple, and frequently contradictory, identities. Denny Roy contends that Taiwan's political history is best understood as a continuous struggle for security. Eschewing the usual emphasis on the high politics of the recent era, he offers a comprehensive narrative of the island's political history. Roy's approach allows him to integrate his understanding of Taiwan's domestic politics with its foreign affairs -- particularly the relations with mainland China. His is a balanced account, incorporating up-to-date coverage and presenting many indigenous voices. Taiwan: A Political History illuminates the origins of the island's often-troubled domestic and international political situation.
SYNOPSIS
Roy (Asia-Pacific Center for Security Studies) contends that Taiwan's political history is best understood as a continuous struggle for security. He integrates an understanding of Taiwan's domestic politics with its foreign affairs, particularly relations with mainland China, in this narrative of the island's political history. Contemporary b&w photos are included. Annotation ©2003 Book News, Inc., Portland, OR
FROM THE CRITICS
Foreign Affairs
This is a history that provides excellent background information for understanding the complexities of the current "Taiwan problem." Tracing the changing formation of Taiwanese identity and the island's continuous search for security, Roy gives a straightforward account of the turbulent rise and fall of all who have sought to rule the island. His story extends from the first Chinese settlers (the Ming dynasty loyalists fighting rear-guard actions against the Qing dynasty) through the Dutch, Portuguese, Qing, and Japanese periods of colonial rule, concluding with the Nationalist Chinese era and Chen Shui-bian's presidency. He shows a repeated pattern of people migrating from mainland China and developing a separate Taiwanese identity. It is a rich and fascinating history, but it offers no easy solutions to the current problems in Taiwan-China-U.S. relations.