The Symbolic Construction of Taiwanese National Identity: The Cultural Discourse of National Heritage at Lukang Lung-shan Temple

2017 ◽  
Vol 10 (3) ◽  
pp. 221-236
Author(s):  
Ming-li Yao
2002 ◽  
Vol 9 (3-4) ◽  
pp. 183-198
Author(s):  
Elsabé Kloppers

AbstractIn this article the convergence of the religion and national identity of the Afrikaner is examined and related to the influence of these views on the hymnological tradition of the Afrikaner. It is argued that some metrical psalms used to be particularly popular especially because of the parallels seen between Israel of the Bible and the Afrikaner nation. The hymns or metrical psalms usually sung on the Day of the Covenant are significant in indicating the `national' hymns - hymns or metrical psalms that played a role in promoting national identity. Folk hymn tunes that may be seen as part of the national heritage, and the influence of hymnals in Afrikaans on the national identity are discussed. It is shown that an overbearing demand for preservation and protection of the national heritage' has hampered the development of a true Afrikaans hymnody and that an inspired new Afrikaans hymnody is still to be developed.


2015 ◽  
Vol 30 (2) ◽  
pp. 332-359 ◽  
Author(s):  
Magdalena Waligórska

Focusing on three contemporary grassroots initiatives of preserving Jewish heritage and commemorating Jews in Belarus, namely, the Jewish Museum in Minsk, Ada Raǐchonak’s private museum of regional heritage in Hermanovichi, and the initiative of erecting the monument of Eliezer Ben-Yehuda in Hlybokae, the present article discusses how local efforts to commemorate Jews and preserve Jewish heritage tap into the culture of political dissent, Belarus’s international relations, and the larger project of redefining the Belarusian national identity. Looking at the way these memorial interventions frame Jewish legacy within a Belarusian national narrative, the article concentrates in particular on the institution of the public historian and the small, informal social networks used to operate under a repressive regime. Incorporating the multicultural legacy of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth into the canon of Belarusian national heritage and recognizing the contribution of ethnic minorities to the cultural landscape of Belarus, new memory projects devoted to Jewish history in Belarus mark a caesura in the country’s engagement with its ethnic Others and are also highly political. While the effort of filling in the gaps in national historiography and celebrating the cultural diversity of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania overlaps in significant ways with the agenda of the anti-Lukashenka opposition, Jewish heritage in Belarus also resonates with the state authorities, who seek to instrumentalize it for their own vision of national unity.


2014 ◽  
Vol 2 (2) ◽  
pp. 31-39
Author(s):  
Kujtim Elezi ◽  
Nuran Saliu

The first aim of this paper is to present the after W.W.II temptation of the Macedonian authors to identify national elements that is Macedonian elements in houses build in Macedonia. After identifying them, the same elements (now national) will be used to declare the national heritage in Macedonian houses. Secondly, we would like to compare the same elements found as Macedonian with other places, like Turkey (involving Bursa, Istanbul and other cities), to see if they really are different as those from houses in Turkey, or there is a similarity between them.


Author(s):  
Will Abberley

This chapter argues that Victorian philology acted as a vehicle for contrasting visions of national heritage in England. Romantic ideas of language expressing national character seemed to render philology a way of discovering a people’s collective spirit through history. However, the nature of this national-linguistic heritage could be imagined very differently. Some scholars presented ancient Anglo-Saxon as the pure essence of Englishness. This view framed the influx of French and Latin elements following the Norman Conquest as a corruption that had weakened the language’s authenticity and power. Others, though, took pride in English’s composite nature, framing it as a mark of England’s cosmopolitan and imperialist destiny. These opposing perspectives are explored by contrasting statements by the historian E. A. Freeman and the lexicographer R. C. Trench.


2010 ◽  
Vol 16 (2) ◽  
pp. 169-179 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dodeye U. Williams

Identifying the most influential dimension in the construction of national identity poses a huge challenge. Keillor et al. (1996) identify four key dimensions as being important in shaping national identity. This article examines these dimensions, namely national heritage, cultural homogeneity, ethnocentrism and belief structure within the Nigerian context and attempts to measure which of these is the most influential. In addition to the historical information contained in existing literature, a survey is carried out to provide an empirical basis for this analysis.


2014 ◽  
Vol 3 ◽  
pp. 65-78
Author(s):  
Halina Kobeckaitė

The main aim of this article is to describe the role played of two Turkic communities residing in the territory of the Great Duchy of Lithuania from the 14th century onwards – the Karaims and the Tatars – in the appearance and development of oriental and Turkological studies in Vilnius. A short overview of the state of Oriental Studies in Vilnius, in particular in Vilnius University in the 18th–19th centuries, and its correlation with the local “Orient”, is given in the first part of the article. Most of the article focuses on the period between the two world wars, when Karaim and Tatar scholars, educationists and spiritual leaders took a very active role in investigating and popularising their own cultural heritage and Turkic culture in general. Through publications in magazines, the activities of societies and communities, an available pool of effective and skilled experts Karaim and Tatars courses emerged in Vilnius as an equivalent subject to traditional Oriental Studies and Turkology. Their achievements paved the way for the great resurgence in national identity and the revival academic research and teaching on Lithuania’s national heritage after it regained its independence in 1990. Research on the Oriental heritage of the Lithuanian Grand Duchy was out of the question during the Soviet period. Today when linguistic and cultural studies and research on Karaim and Tatar culture have become an important feature of Turkology, the Oriental studies programme in Vilnius constitutes a relevant part of professional academic life.


Author(s):  
Faten Mahmoud Abu Salah

The study aimed to reveal the degree to which the students of the University of Jordan represent concepts of national identity from their point of view. To achieve the goal of the study, the researchers used the descriptive approach. The tool was represented in a questionnaire consisting of (20) paragraphs. After confirming its stability and sincerity, it was applied to a random sample consisting of (400) A student and a student from the University of Jordan, the results showed that the total degree was obtained to represent the students of the University of Jordan for the concepts of national identity from their point of view on an arithmetic average (3.75) with a high degree. In addition to, there are statistically significant differences appeared in a degree that represents the students of the University of Jordan for the concepts of national identity attributed to variable gender, while there are no statistically significant differences appeared in a degree that represents the students of the University of Jordan for the concepts of national identity attributed to variable (college and year). In light of these results, a number of proposals and recommendations were presented, the most important of which was interest in creating a generation that adheres to its national identity, consolidating elements of national heritage from childhood, emphasizing the importance of the Arabic language as the language of the Qur’an, and informing them of the honorable Arab history to be proud of their past belonging to their present.


Author(s):  
Zafar Uzakovich Khayitov

Awareness of national identity is a complex, multifaceted spiritual state in the minds and beliefs of people, which impacts on all phenomena of social development. The level of national identity is an important factor for further development of the countries that have recently gained their independence. The essence of national identity phenomenon, its role in the existence of the nation, defining its status as sovereign entity, the role of the state factor in the system of national identity are analyzed via socio-philosophical analysis in the article. KEY WORDS: ethnos, national values, Koran, national heritage, “title” nation, tolerance, political stability.


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