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Democracy on Trial: Social Movements and Cultural Politics in Postauthoritarian Taiwan. YA-CHUNG CHUANG. Hong Kong: The Chinese University Press, 2013. xix + 269 pp. $39.00. ISBN: 978-962-996-546-4

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 December 2013

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Abstract

Type
Book Reviews
Copyright
Copyright © The China Quarterly 2013 

Among Chinese societies, Taiwan has been the only one to witness peaceful power transfer by election, and yet its democratic experience receives contrasting appraisals both abroad and domestically. For authoritarian rulers in China and Singapore, Taiwan exemplifies the negative lesson of empowering people, since it seems to be synonymous with political instability, prolonged decision-making and economic inefficiency. NGO activists in Hong Kong and Malaysia and liberals in China, on the other hand, look favourably at Taiwan's vibrant civil society, which has brought about progressive reforms. At home, there is a pervasive sense of ambivalence among average citizens, who cherish their political freedom and yet resent overtly partisan politicking. While a solid Taiwanese national identity is on the steady rise (from 17.6 per cent in 1992 to 57.5 per cent in 2013, according to the Election Study Center, National Chengchi University), the political landscape is relentlessly fissured by the power struggle between pan-blue and pan-green camps.

Democracy on Trial is a timely reflection on Taiwan's trajectory from the lifting of martial law in 1987 up to the present day. While political scientists and sociologists use opinion polls, indicators and statistical data on civic organizations and protest events to measure the health of a political regime, Chuang, who comes from the anthropological background, offers a bottom-up and experience-near “ethnography of Taiwanese democracy” (p. 3). Rather than assuming a fictionalized observation point from the outside, Chuang writes as an engaged activist and participant scholar. The book is written primarily on the basis of his field observation which has lasted more than a decade. Conventional scholarship focuses on the actual working of political institutions, and is occasionally concerned about their economic performance and the state–society relationship. Democracy on Trial broadens the analytical scope by incorporating the topics of movement activists' interpersonal ties (chapter two), everyday world of TV and radio audiences (chapter three), intellectuals' debates (chapter four), ethnic activism (chapter five) and urban neighbourhood (chapters six and seven).

Cultural anthropology has long bidden farewell to the notion of positivistic ethnography and the possibility of realistic representation. Following this trend, this book seeks to understand Taiwan's recent political history through the personal stories of a number of actors, including the author himself. The narrative is intimately biographical as well as autobiographical, and frequently sprinkled with conceptual reflections from the cutting-edge cultural theories, as expected in the contemporary ethnographical works. Democracy on Trial offers an intellectual challenge to the readers who might prefer objectivist language and a more structuralistic approach. However, I find the author justified in adopting this unorthodox method. This book does not aim at measuring Taiwan in the Freedom-House-style indexes, nor does it seek to assess its “quality of democracy” or classify its “political culture.” Instead, it is intended as a thick description of how ordinary people experience democracy in their daily milieu. In some places, this unique approach generates insightful observation. In documenting the great 18 May 1997 protest, Chuang demonstrates that the unprecedented mobilization was made possible by the overlapping personal webs forged in the heyday of student activism, rather than the NGO's organizational strength.

Overall, Chuang succeeds in presenting a contextually rich picture of real-life democracy. For example, for Yongkang residents engaged in neighbourhood activism in Taipei city, democracy has been experienced both as an opportunity and a risk (chapters six and seven). The waning of authoritarian control allowed them to launch a grassroots initiative to preserve their environment and build an egalitarian and participatory sense of belonging. However, political rivalry in local elections and the drive to commercialize the area for tourism created unexpected internal conflict, which eventually eclipsed shared community identity. Also noteworthy is the prominent role of females in organizing their community and their attempt to redesign the public environment according to the vision of “collective motherhood.” The emergence of new gender relations on the agenda of Taiwan's democratic experiment has been easily neglected.

This book challenges received wisdom in a number of places. Media has been long blamed for exacerbating polarized partisanship; yet the author finds TV talk shows and underground radio stations have helped to “normalize a talking public.” It would have been better if Chuang had expanded his observation on new media, such as blogs, online forums and social media, which have played such an important role in recent political mobilization. Chuang rightly sees the politics of indigenization (bentuhua) not merely as ethnic conflict or partisan struggle, but also as reverberating within the debates of intellectuals and movement activism. The pursuit of an indigenous identity is richer and more reflective than a nationalistic project. Although Chuang salvages the progressive and democratic potentials of bentu convincingly, the book misleadingly uses the derogatory term nativism (for being anti-foreign) as an equivalent with indigenization.

Rejecting naive triumphalism and picky pessimism, this book presents a nuanced understanding of Taiwan's democracy as tentative, experimental and reflective. The book concludes with a nice reflection on the China factor. Whether Taiwan's political freedom will be squeezed by an increasingly hegemonic China, or its experience will be a lodestar to inspire a challenge to communist domination, remains to be seen; democracy is essentially on-going and unfinished. Democracy on Trial is highly recommended for those who are interested in deeper meanings and daily experiences of democracy, in Taiwan and elsewhere.