North American Taiwan Studies Association

The North American Taiwan Studies Association (NATSA) is an American 501(c)(3) nonprofit academic organization, which was established in 1994. It is operated by overseas Taiwanese students, North American doctoral students, and recent graduates who are interested in Taiwan studies.[1] The main mission of NATSA is to organize an annual conference in North America in order to facilitate scholarly exchange and publication among researchers and students from different disciplines and area studies who are interested in intellectual dialogues pertaining to Taiwan.[2]

Activities

Since its establishment, NATSA has organized 21 annual conferences to support North America-based researchers who study Taiwan. Following the success of this expanded format, NATSA hosted its 19th Annual Conference at the University of California-Santa Barbara in 2013. In collaboration with the Center for Taiwan Studies at the University and the Institute of Taiwan History, Academic Sinica, we were able to increase our faculty-level participation to more than 40 while attracting participants from 47 academic institutions from around the world. The 2013 conference theme, Taiwan in Theory, encouraged discussions of how research based in Taiwan might be pushed to make further contributions to theoretical debates across the humanities and social sciences. In 2014, moving forward to become a professional academic association and in celebrating the Association’s 20th anniversary, the organizing committee decided to employ “time” as the primary concept for discussion in order to reflect on the island’s diverse pasts and our association’s rich history simultaneously. The conference theme, The Zeitgeists of Taiwan: Looking Back, Moving Forward, is to explore a collective feeling that Taiwan was “stuck” politically and economically, and that it was at a sort of crossroads, in which difficult decisions needed to be made to avoid future crises, or at least to alleviate a prevailing sense of crisis at various zeigeists.

The 2015 conference, held on June 11- 13, follows the same spirit. The NATSA 2015 conference, titled “Motions and the Motionless: (Dis/Re-)Connecting Taiwan to the World,” endeavours to advance global Taiwan studies by setting Taiwan in motion, both in theory and in practice. To capture something of the dynamics and energies infused in Taiwanese society, this conference draws on an expansive concept of motion through which we hope to attract papers that explore and exploit the term’s potentials and complexities. Over the past few years, those concerned with Taiwan have witnessed it in the midst of a series of fervent social upheavals of various kinds. These are both themselves social movements as well as responses and reactions to a set of other larger streams of economic, political, social, and cultural motions. As a set of islands historically populated by waves of immigrants and impositions of power, however, Taiwan has long been caught up in and composed of motion. The rich connotations of the main theme of “motions” will serve as a catalyst propelling us to place Taiwan in dialogue with the diverse geographical connections and historical contexts around the island and across the globe.

The committee has paid indispensable efforts to gather over twenty distinguished or promising scholars to join this meeting for discussing papers and speaking in our featured events. To keep the discussion in a fluid and dynamic form, it was devoid of one single keynote speech, but created opportunities for the guests and participants to address diverse issues that are related to the conference theme, as highlighted in the next section.

Besides individual abstract applications, the committee members succeeded to also organize three panels, together with one another panel formed by the deadline, submitted to the reviewers for consideration. By December, 2014, students and scholars based in North America, Oceania, Europe, Taiwan and the other parts of Asia submitted their exciting abstracts to the program committee. After a double-blind review system and an exciting panel organizing process, Fifteen panels and one invited workshop, with forty-seven papers, were presented at Harvard University. In addition, two poster presenters came to share their early findings. Due to time and financial constraints, some panelists were geographically motionless this time, but they tried skype presentations to join this truly global conference. [3]

Early History

When NATSA was originally founded, it was known as the North American Taiwan Studies Conference and was located on the web at www.natsc.org until August 2006 when it switched to its current address.[4]

Conference Locations

The annual conferences are held in different locations every year:

Year Location Conference Theme [5]
1994 Yale University Inaugural North American Taiwan Studies Conference
1995 Yale University History and Nationalism
1996 Michigan State University The Politics of Ethnicity and Identity
1997 University of California, Berkeley Mapping the Terrain of Taiwan Studies
1998 University of Texas, Austin Putting Taiwan in Global Perspective
1999 University of Wisconsin, Madison Re-Imagining Political Community: Taiwan Facing the New Millennium
2000 Harvard University Taiwan 2000: Envisioning a Pluralistic Future
2001 Washington University, Seattle Seeking Taiwanese Perspectives: Interdisciplinary Reflection and Dialogue
2002 University of Chicago Power, Knowledge Production, and Agency: Towards a Critical Taiwan Studies
2003 Rutgers University Changes, Continuity and Contestations in the Taiwanese Society
2004 University of Hawai'i, Manoa Taiwan Studies in Comparative Perspectives
2005 University of Colorado, Boulder Difference, Democracy, Justice: Toward an Inclusive Taiwanese Society
2006 University of California, Santa Cruz Crossing the Borders, Fostering the Future: Taiwan Studies in the Intersections
2007 University of Wisconsin, Madison Taiwan in the Nexus of Empires
2008 Washington University, Seattle Translating the Political, Re-visioning the Social: What's the Next Turn for Taiwan?
2009 University of Texas, Austin Locating Taiwan: Space, Culture and Society
2010 University of California, Berkeley China Effect: Securing Taiwan in an Age of Conflicts and Cooperation
2011 University of Pittsburgh The Trajectory of Taiwan in a Global Context
2012 Indiana University, Bloomington Taiwan: Gateway, Node, Liminal Space
2013 University of California, Santa Barbara Taiwan in Theory
2014 University of Wisconsin, Madison The Zeitgeists of Taiwan: Looking Back, Moving Forward [6]
2015 Harvard University, Boston Motions and the Motionless: (Dis/Re-) Connecting Taiwan to the World [7]

Presidents of NATSA

The Presidents of NATSA are elected annually by the membership. They have included:

Year Name
1995 Chia-lung Lin 林佳龍 [8]
1996 Jih-wen Lin 林繼文 [9]
1997 Chung-Hsien Huang 黃崇憲 [10]
1998 Mei-Lin Pan 潘美玲 [11]
1999 Wei-der Shu 許維德 [12]
2000 Tze-Luen Lin 林子倫 [13]
2001 Chien-Juh Gu 辜千祝 [14]
2002 Hsiu-hua Shen 沈秀華 [15]
2003 Jeffrey Hou 侯志仁 [16]
2004 Same as last year
2005 Chun-Chi Wang 王君琦 [17]
2006 Frank Cheng-Shan Liu 劉正山 [18]
2007 Huey-Tyng Gau 高慧婷
2008 Cheng-Yi Huang 黃丞儀 [19]
2009 Hsun-Hui Tseng 曾薰慧 [20]
2010 Yi-tze Lee 李宜澤 [21]
2011 Hsin-Yang Wu 吳欣陽
2012 Chris Chih-Ming Liang 梁志鳴
2013 Laura Jo-Han Wen 温若含
2014 Dominic Meng-Hsuan Yang 楊孟軒 [22]
2015 Feng-En Tu 涂豐恩

References

  1. http://www.iias.nl/iiasn/21/institutes/21PP10.html
  2. http://www.na-tsa.org/new/about/mission-of-natsa
  3. http://www.na-tsa.org/papers/2015/NATSA-2015-Conference-Booklet.pdf
  4. http://web.archive.org/web/20060803202034/http://natsc.org/
  5. Dates, locations, and titles of NATSA's annual conferences found via mining of pages prior to http://web.archive.org/web/20060803202034/http://natsc.org/ and pages more recent than http://web.archive.org/web/20080417213543/http://www.na-tsa.org/new. Many of these can also be verified with web searches for the titles that pull up contemporaneous listserv discussions or calls for papers on other academic sites (for example, http://www.h-net.org/announce/show.cgi?ID=153234).
  6. http://eap.einaudi.cornell.edu/content/call-papers-natsa-2014-zeitgeists-taiwan-looking-back-moving-forward
  7. http://www.na-tsa.org/new/2015/main-theme
  8. http://www.citylove.org.tw/publications/213-b.html
  9. http://idv.sinica.edu.tw/ljw/
  10. http://soc.thu.edu.tw/faculty-Chung-HsienHuang.htm
  11. http://hs.nctu.edu.tw/Hakka-F-faculty/Faculty_15_MLPan.htm
  12. http://hs.nctu.edu.tw/Faculty/WDShu
  13. http://politics.ntu.edu.tw/?p=278
  14. http://www.wmich.edu/sociology/directory/gu.html
  15. http://www.soc.nthu.edu.tw/people/bio.php?PID=13
  16. http://faculty.washington.edu/jhou/
  17. http://www.dengl.ndhu.edu.tw/files/14-1043-8107,r627-1.php
  18. http://www2.nsysu.edu.tw/politics/liu/main/FrankCSLiu.htm
  19. http://idv.sinica.edu.tw/chengyi/english/professional.htm
  20. http://www.columbia.edu/cu/weai/faculty/tseng.html
  21. http://www.erc.ndhu.edu.tw/files/11-1048-2298.php
  22. http://www.utexas.edu/cola/insts/historicalstudies/people/fellows.php
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