Exile and Stigma? The Relationship between The Society and The Matrimony of Post-War Immigrants

碩士 === 國立雲林科技大學 === 文化資產維護系碩士班 === 95 === After 1949, a throng of immigrants from China left their hometown because of politics and then immigrated to Taiwan. The immigrants started to interact with Taiwanese social group by means of marriage. After the retrocession of Taiwan, the immigrants had to...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Bo-yu Chen, 陳柏羽
Other Authors: Kae-cherng Yang
Format: Others
Language:zh-TW
Published: 2007
Online Access:http://ndltd.ncl.edu.tw/handle/35036994417099798398
Description
Summary:碩士 === 國立雲林科技大學 === 文化資產維護系碩士班 === 95 === After 1949, a throng of immigrants from China left their hometown because of politics and then immigrated to Taiwan. The immigrants started to interact with Taiwanese social group by means of marriage. After the retrocession of Taiwan, the immigrants had to face the different culture and complicated ideology of the Taiwanese society, for the reasons of politics, society, and economics, before they mixed with the local groups in Taiwan. Therefore the thesis focuses on the stigmatization in the immigrants’ marriage, from 1949 to modern times, analyzing and recording how the mass media in Taiwan described the stigmatization and how the society built a stigmatic sense in the immigrants’ marriage during fifty years or more under a different background. The issue of the immigrants’ marriage is relating to the degrees of the immigrants in Taiwanese groups and society. By observing the levels of the immigrants in different authorities and in the issue of the identity of the immigrants and their job switches, the thesis can tell the stigmatic difference among different immigrant groups and the conversation between the male immigrants and the female Taiwanese. Through the discussion of the marriage between different provinces, examining the mixing of plural groups’ marriage in Taiwan and how the people in Taiwanese society thought, the thesis looks upon and helps the ever forgotten and misunderstood marriage of the immigrants.