Book Launch: 'Heaven Does Not Block All Roads: A History of Taiwan Through the Life of Huang Chin-tao'
Key information
- Date
- Time
-
3:00 pm to 5:00 pm
- Venue
- SOAS Main Building
- Room
- DLT
- Event type
- Launch
About this event
The Centre of Taiwan Studies is delighted to welcome Anna Beth Keim to share her new book, Heaven Does Not Block All Roads: A History of Taiwan Through the Life of Huang Chin-tao.
The book traces Taiwan’s turbulent 20th century through the extraordinary life of one man who lived its every turn.
Book description
Huang Chin-tao was born in 1926, when Taiwan was still part of the Japanese Empire. By the time he died in 2019, Taiwan was a bustling, high-tech democracy – and Huang had lived through every twist and turn along the way. He served as a Japanese soldier in China during the Second World War; joined an armed uprising against Taiwan’s Chinese Nationalist post-war government; spent 24 years imprisoned during the island’s decades of martial law; and finally emerged to help lead the pro-democracy movement of the 1980s in his hometown, Taichung.
Drawing upon archives, memoirs, interviews and more, Anna Beth Keim tells the story of Taiwan through the journey of one extraordinary individual. From his childhood scuffling with Japanese children to his transformation into a ‘democracy farmer’, Huang’s life vividly reflects contemporary Taiwanese history, and continues to inspire young Taiwanese today who are fighting to keep their homeland independent.
Over roughly a century, the island transitioned from an imperial outpost to an authoritarian state to a democracy – one still at risk of being snuffed out by China. This story is uniquely Taiwanese, yet illuminates experiences shared by countries everywhere: of colonisation and its aftermath, and the ongoing struggle to be free.
Image credit: Silas Baisch via Unsplash
About the speaker
Anna Beth Keim
Anna Beth Keim is a freelance writer and translator, who has been reporting on Taiwan since 2015. Her work has appeared in ChinaFile, Foreign Policy, YaleGlobal and The Foreign Service Journal. This is her first book.