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Written by Yang Yi
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Like all military dependents’ villages facing the wrecker’s ball, the
Chongxing community had plenty of old residents shed tears over it, as
well as many recent arrivals who felt reluctant to leave. |
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Written by Formosa Culture Maga...
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In 1994, the Council for Cultural Affairs (CCA) formally initiated its Community Empowerment program. It was hoped that, through culture, community spirit could be fostered and local culture could be established so that, starting from the small and working towards the large scale, a new Taiwanese homeland could be created. |
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Written by Lin Yi-hsin
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For over a decade, the Taipei Cultural Center in New York City has introduced a wide variety of Taiwanese cultural forms,
including still images, photography, ceramics, puppet theater,
and Beijing opera, to Americans on the East Coast. |
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Written by Lin Yu-long
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Founded in 1994, the Centre Culturel de Taiwan à Paris (CCTP), located
in one of Europe’s cultural capitals, is the most important means by
which Taiwan’s Council
for Cultural Affairs promotes Taiwanese culture. |
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Written by Editorial staff/ FCM
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Since 1994, the Council for Cultural Affairs (CCA) has used its Community Empowerment Program to build communal identity through culture, improve the overall living environment, and nurture local cultural resources, all towards the ideal of fostering a new Taiwanese culture. |
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Written by Perry Hsieh
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Canadian environmentalist and ex-high-tech industry employee leads the way in organic waste recycling.
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Written by Chen Heng-xing
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Among the various institutions affiliated with the Council for Cultural Affairs, Yilan's National Center for Traditional Arts is remarkable for its renown, its revenues, and its great numbers of visitors. As a government institution, how has it been able to achieve such success? |
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Written by Chen Heng-xing
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Director of the National Center for Traditional Arts Lin Te-fu is one of the most important figures behind policies aimed at promoting "cultural tourism" in his native Yilan. During his tenure as head of the Cultural Affairs Bureau for Yilan County, he spearheaded the "Yilan International Children's Folklore and Folk Games Festival" and the "Happy New Year in Yilan" campaign. |
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Written by Chiu Kun-liang
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In the past, few people took any notice of Losheng Sanatorium. If the dispute over the Hsinchuang Line MRT project had not erupted, Losheng would have remained unchanged, people would still be talking about lepers instead of Hansen's disease, and Losheng would still be nothing more than a specialized medical facility in Huilung district.
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Written by Wang An-chi
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To properly memorialize Yu Ta-kang, we must look back to the 1970s, a decade that marked the beginning of the rise of the Taiwanese economy. The 1970s also saw the emergence of a new trend in the arts as the imitation of Western art gave way to a nativism that took inspiration from local sources. It is now taken as a given that Taiwan experienced a cultural renaissance in the 1970s. |
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