Description: This book presents a historical overview of vegetal ecocriticism in Taiwan and examines human-plant entanglements on the island.
Brief description: Hsinya Huang is a Distinguished Professor of American and Comparative Literature, National Sun Yat-Sen University (NSYSU), Taiwan. She is the author or editor of books and articles on transnational and transpacific studies, Native American and Pacific Islander literatures, and humanities for the environment, including (De)Colonizing the Body: Disease, Empire, and (Alter)Native Medicine in Contemporary Native American Women's Writings (2004), Native North American Literatures: Reflections on Multiculturalism (2009), Aspects of Transnational and Indigenous Cultures (2014), Chinese Railroad Workers: Recovery and Representation (2017), Diaspora, Memory and Resurgence: Trans-Pacific Indigenous Writing and Practice (2021), and Radiation Ecologies in Trans-Pacific Indigenous Literature: After Hiroshima (forthcoming). She is former Dean of Arts and Humanities and Provost of Academic Affairs and Faculty Advancement, NSYSU, and served as Director General of International Cooperation and Science Education, Ministry of Science and Technology, Taiwan.
Review Quotes:
"This timely collection demonstrates the blossoming of critical plant studies in Taiwan, an island of distinctive botanical diversity. Through phytocritical readings of diverse literary and cultural materials, contributors call attention to a range of absorbing topics--from plantation histories and tea poetry to rooftop gardens and millet cultivation--as well as a variety of urban, rural, and wild vegetal agents. Reflecting the multidimensionality of human-flora relations in Taiwan, this landmark publication is the first of its kind to foreground the emergence of the field within a specific cultural context." --John Charles Ryan, Associate Professor, Southern Cross University, Australia
"How do plants shape Taiwan's history, culture, and politics? In this groundbreaking critical anthology, Iping Liang and a team of eco-scholars explore the varied interactions and complex relationships between plants, humans, and places in Taiwan. It is a must-read for those who are interested in Taiwan's Vegetal Humanities scholarship." --Chia-ju Chang, Brooklyn College-CUNY "Critical Plant Studies in Taiwan, edited by Iping Liang, is a pioneering study about ways in which the vegetal, the botanical, and the human are entangled, and continuously impact on and influence each other. This is a book that offers something for everyone: for the experts and the uninitiated. The essays written by leading scholars in the field of East Asian Critical Plant Studies focus on Taiwan's varied vegetation." --Chitra Sankaran, National University of Singapore