CHRONOLOGY
OF IMPORTANT EVENTS
IN THE TAIWANESE LITERATURE
Background
Since
Meiji Restoration, Japan modernized rapidly by absorbing Western
knowledge. In the field of literature, by establishing colloquial
style writings (unification of the spoken and written languages)
in Meiji 20s (late 1880s), she produced literary giants such
as Mori, Ozaki, Natsume, Tanizaki, etc. By Taisho period (1910s),
a complete collection of Natsume Soseki's individual works
had been published.
In Taiwan,
prior to the Japanese occupation in 1895, children were educated
in private tutorial classes called Book House (shu-fang),
mainly studying Han literary language (wen-yen) in
Taiwanese (Holo or Hahkka, which are versions
of the Min or Canton dialect used by the majority of the population
in Taiwan). Western type schools were set up in 1887 by Liu
Ming-chuan, but were abandoned within several years. However,
in the mid-1860s, the Presbyterian missionaries established
primary schools, secondary schools, and seminaries, in T'ai-nan
and later in the Taipei basin. These English and Canadian
missionaries spoke and wrote romanized Taiwanese.
Most literary
practices prior to 1920s, namely the old literature,
was in the classical Chinese tradition, such as poetry writing
and calligraphy by the gentry class.
Mandarin,
the modern colloquial Chinese, was imposed as the national
language by Chinese Nationalist Government who came to the
island as the ruling elite after the WW II. The use of Taiwanese
was suppressed.
In 1896,
the year following the Japanese occupation, the Colonial Governor's
Office established the National Language School(kokugo
gakko/ kuoyu hsueh shao) in Taipei and Japanese Language
Instructing Houses in various locations on the island.
The latter was divided into two sections, namely Instructors
Training (later became normal schools) and Language Training.
After 1898, they became public elementary schools for Taiwanese
children.
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