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Saints and ghosts: nation-building and narratives of punishment in Taiwan’s prison museums

Helen Murphy (Travel and Tourism Program, International College, Ming Chuan University, Taipei, Taiwan)
Ya-Ling Chang (Department of Foreign Languages and Literature, National Ilan University, Yilan, Taiwan)

International Journal of Tourism Cities

ISSN: 2056-5607

Article publication date: 7 July 2022

Issue publication date: 5 June 2023

254

Abstract

Purpose

This paper explores two museums in Taiwan, both former sites of incarceration, and asks how they reflect Taiwan’s evolving relationship with the past. Taiwan has successfully emerged from its authoritarian past into a democratic present; yet, it still bears the scars of its traumatic and violent history in the places where trauma and pain was exacted over Taiwanese people by different regimes. Two of these places are former prisons, now museums with common histories of incarceration, but very different approaches to presentation of traumatic pasts. This paper aims to understand the selective presentation of narratives of punishment in prison museums in Taiwan and what they reflect about Taiwan’s national identity.

Design/methodology/approach

This research used a qualitative ethnographic methodology, approaching prison museums as research sites with multidimensional textual, spatial and visual data. This study used a narrative ethnology approach to analyse the content, structure and social context surrounding the stories told about punishment at the sites.

Findings

While the Jingmei White Terror Memorial Park documents past abuses under the authoritarian Kuomindang Government (1945–1987), the narratives presented at the Chiayi Prison Museum, constructed under Japanese colonial rule (1895–1945), ignore past colonial violence. This study argues that the invisibility of past colonial violence in Chiayi prison museum acts to strengthen Taiwan’s multicultural national identity, while Jingmei WTMP acts to valorise political prisoners as heroic fighters for Taiwan’s democracy and human rights.

Originality/value

This research makes a contribution to the museum studies literature through extending understanding of the relationship between former carceral spaces and national identity projects.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

The authors would like to thank the anonymous reviewers for their careful reading of this paper and their valuable suggestions.

Citation

Murphy, H. and Chang, Y.-L. (2023), "Saints and ghosts: nation-building and narratives of punishment in Taiwan’s prison museums", International Journal of Tourism Cities, Vol. 9 No. 2, pp. 348-361. https://doi.org/10.1108/IJTC-02-2022-0025

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2022, International Tourism Studies Association.

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