
Education platforms team up on “New Taiwan History Movement”
Two major Taiwanese popular education platforms have teamed up on a project called the "New Taiwan Movement." An exhibition kicks off this multiyear project in Taipei, with a series of interactive exhibits about Taiwan’s history. It’s a collab between the YouTube channel Taiwan Bar and the online platform StoryStudio. They hope to provide viewers with a fresh look at some of the most recent research on Taiwanese history, updating stories about the island and its people. While the project is Taiwan based, it aims to attract viewers from all over the world.
Taiwan Bar, which has over one million YouTube subscribers, collaborated with the platform StoryStudio, to create the “New Taiwan Movement” animations. Now they have even bigger plans.
Hsiao Yu-chen
Taiwan Bar CEO
International attention on Taiwan is starting to grow. We’re calling academia together again, we’re calling the general public together, to create a very grassroots cultural project, to gather up the results of research on Taiwanese history in the last 30 or 40 years, and share those results.
There are three big sections to the exhibition. Interactive historical exhibits invite visitors to imagine the future, turning visitors into explorers, and offering a brand-new perspective on the roots of Taiwanese society and its diverse culture.
Tu Feng-en
StoryStudio founder
We will have a website, actually, and there’ll be animations, as you just saw. This animation series will have videos, we hope, as well as in-person elements, including the exhibition we see today, and a series of lectures. It will last at least three years, perhaps even longer.
The exhibition is at the General Association of Chinese Culture, and will show until Nov. 17. After it closes, the project will continue, and the two platforms are adamant that this project will go global.
Tu Feng-en
StoryStudio founder
We hope that in the end it will be in 10 languages, but first we’re starting with the languages people are most familiar with, so obviously Mandarin, English and Japanese. We will also produce a version of the website in Taiwanese. So through these languages we hope that, as we just said, there will be a lot of care and attention on the situation of Taiwan internationally.
The project aims to present a new angle and format for Taiwanese history, not just a rehash of things you’ve already seen in textbooks: an angle that will allow the world to rediscover Taiwan in the 21st century.
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2024-10-09