Abstract
This paper investigates the rhetorical interconnections between synecdoche and representation in debates, controversies and political protest initiatives following the introduction into Taiwan of two Taiwan-related Japanese publications, one historical revisionist manga cartoon and one Japanese guidebook to prostitution in Taiwan. Doing so, this paper argues that these controversies revolved around discursive representations of exclusionary collective self-making and othering through specific techniques and deployments of the rhetorical figure of synecdoche. The aim here is to show how key political and mass-media agents have shaped their positions through the strategic deployment of synecdoche as a rhetorical catalyst for ascribing representative functions to ideological opponents, for engaging in explanation and speculation over motives, and for passing moral judgments on specific acts and utterances. At the same time, this paper shows how opponents have deployed a corresponding defensive strategy for diffusing synecdochical logic in order to escape such representative functions and to avoid the suggested large-scale responsibility.
Original language | English |
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Article number | Special issue |
Journal | Berliner China-Hefte |
Volume | 47 |
Pages (from-to) | 85-104 |
Number of pages | 15 |
ISSN | 1860-2290 |
Publication status | Published - 1 Jul 2016 |