Colonized since the 1600s, Taiwan is largely a nation of settlers. Yet within its population of 23 million are some 500,000 Aboriginal people. Genetic research has permeated both the political and popular spheres as Taiwanese nationalists and Chinese nationalists argue over the significance of migration theories and as the media proliferates genetic theories on predispositions to alcoholism. As this book demonstrates, genetics serve, on the one hand, to reinforce claims to a unique national identity and, on the other hand, to reinforce anti-Aboriginal prejudices. Increasingly, genetic research on Aborigines is being integrated into biotechnology planning, both in the country and through controversial US patent applications. The legacy of this work has been mass violations of the rights of Taiwanese Aborigines. Examining a troubling revival of racially configured genetic research and the questions of sovereignty it raises, Living Dead in the Pacific details a history of exploitation and resistance that represents a new area of conflict facing Aboriginal people both within Taiwan and around the world.
Produktinformation
Utgivningsdatum2014-01-31
Mått152 x 229 x 23 mm
Vikt550 g
FormatInbunden
SpråkEngelska
Antal sidor292
FörlagUniversity of British Columbia Press
ISBN9780774826594
UtmärkelserWinner of Gertrude J. Robinson Book Prize, Canadian Communication Association 2015 (Canada)
Mark Munsterhjelm teaches in the Department of Sociology, Anthropology, and Criminology at the University of Windsor.
1 Taiwan Aborigines' Genes as Black Boxes2 Aboriginal Peoples' Genes as Narrated and Contested Assemblages3 Imposing Genetic Distinctions: Aboriginal Peoples and Alcoholism in Genetics Research4 Informed Consent in the Austronesian Homeland5 Were the Maori "Made in Taiwan"?6 Internet Shopping Carts and Patenting Taiwan's "Gift to the World"7 Conclusion: The Agency of the Living Dead in Contested SovereigntyNotes; References; Index