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    Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://nccur.lib.nccu.edu.tw/handle/140.119/75678


    Title: The cold war origins of the sino-american conference on mainland China: An obscure legacy of Chen-tsai Wu in trans-pacific China studies
    Authors: Chen, Titus C.
    陳至潔
    Contributors: 國關中心
    Keywords: Chen-tsai Wu;Chiang Ching-kuo;Cold War;Institute of International Relations;Power-knowledge relations
    Date: 2014-03
    Issue Date: 2015-06-11 13:36:06 (UTC+8)
    Abstract: This article adopts a reflexive approach to investigate the history of the Sino-American Conference on Mainland China (SACMC ) the Cold War precursor of the Tahvan-U.S. Conference on Contemporary China (TUSCCC ) Organized and hosted by the Institute of International Relations (HR) of the Republic of China, the Cold War origins of the SACMC demonstrate the notion that power and knowledge-the practice of politics and theory of politics-are asymmetrically and symbiotically co-constitutive. The SACMC functioned as a KMT-sanctioned regime of justifications and persuasions, and the IIR was chosen to carry out the conference series for its international reputation and extensive international networks of exchanges. The ultimate purpose of the conference series was to sustain the ROC government`s justificatory claim that it still legitimately represented China so as to thwart the ever-intensifying act of diplomatic legitimation by the People `s Republic of China (PRC). However, the materialization of the SACMC by the IIR was much less a pie-determined development than a historical contingency that came about as an unanticipated result of the dynamic interaction of power and knowledge in the larger Cold War context. © Institute of International Relations, National Chengchi University, Taipei, Taiwan (ROC).
    Relation: Issues and Studies, 50(1), 89-121
    Data Type: article
    Appears in Collections:[國際關係研究中心] 期刊論文

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