Summary: | 碩士 === 國立清華大學 === 社會學研究所 === 92 === This study is about the author himself as an activist devoted to social movement.
The writer uses a narrative style to reflect upon the changes and choices he faced throughout his devotion to social movement. Among those, the very key events are leaving the labor movement organization he originally belonged to in 1998; following The 921 Earthquake in 1999, choosing to form the Qing-shui-gou workshop in rural area in central Taiwan as his reentry to social movement. To the writer, both changes have firstly made him to surmount his epistemology, and thus enabled him to reflectively understand how an activist can act on the non-telling ontology.
This thesis is divided into two major parts. The first one is the narrative, a portrayal of daily-life experiences. The second are theoretical inner debates. The writer engages the theories of Friedrich Neitzsche, Martin Heidegger, Jacques Lacan and Jean-Paul Sartre to explicate the difficulties activists may encounter in their practices of movement as well as in trying to seek the possible solutions.
The writer believes the fact that activists themselves have never truly become the subjects of social movement and academic activities, and thus may result in a difficult situation in social movement. Therefore, through the given approach, it is expected not only to help the writer himself, but also to contribute to social movement at large.
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