Chen Di’s Record of Formosa (1603) and an alternative Chinese imaginary of otherness
This article examines Chen Di's 1603 text Record of Formosa ( Dongfan ji ), the earliest first-hand account in any language of the indigenous people of Formosa (now called Taiwan). Recent commentators have viewed Chen's text as a key elaboration of Chinese imperial discourse and its various tropes of hierarchical difference. In contrast, I argue that Chen reads the perceived cultural differences between his society and Taiwan's indigenous peoples as evidence of the contingency, rather than inevitable superiority, of a historical story that produces the outcome of ‘civilization’. Building on a broader understanding of Chen's intellectual biography and his extant works, I show that Chen Di places the indigenes along a different timeline in which they forge their own contingent history parallel to, rather than behind, that of a civilizational centre. By doing so, Chen's historical narrative resists aligning their society with Han Chinese forms of development and offers a glimpse of how late Ming syncretic thought could produce an account of legitimate otherness.
| Item Type | Article |
|---|---|
| Copyright holders | © 2020 The Author |
| Departments | Government |
| DOI | 10.1017/S0018246X1900061X |
| Date Deposited | 05 Nov 2019 16:24 |
| Acceptance Date | 2019-10-04 |
| URI | https://researchonline.lse.ac.uk/id/eprint/102388 |
Explore Further
-
picture_as_pdf -
subject - Published Version
-
- Available under Creative Commons: Attribution-NonCommercial-No Derivative Works 4.0