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- f49a45524a183d50d5962b08249f51b79394a7815f6ddeb89f790901ce452601 accessdate "2009-05-20".
- f49a45524a183d50d5962b08249f51b79394a7815f6ddeb89f790901ce452601 date "2003-07-17".
- f49a45524a183d50d5962b08249f51b79394a7815f6ddeb89f790901ce452601 first "June Teufel".
- f49a45524a183d50d5962b08249f51b79394a7815f6ddeb89f790901ce452601 isCitedBy Sinicization.
- f49a45524a183d50d5962b08249f51b79394a7815f6ddeb89f790901ce452601 last "Dreyer".
- f49a45524a183d50d5962b08249f51b79394a7815f6ddeb89f790901ce452601 location "Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars".
- f49a45524a183d50d5962b08249f51b79394a7815f6ddeb89f790901ce452601 quote "In order to shore up his government’s legitimacy, Chiang set about turning Taiwan’s inhabitants into Chinese. To use Renan’s terminology, Chiang chose to re-define the concept of shared destiny to include the mainland. Streets were re-named; major thoroughfares in Taipei received names associated with the traditional Confucian virtues. The avenue passing in front of the foreign ministry en route to the presidential palace was named chieh-shou , in Chiang’s honor. Students were required to learn Mandarin and speak it exclusively; those who disobeyed and spoke Taiwanese Min, Hakka, or aboriginal tongues could be fined, slapped, or subjected to other disciplinary actions.".
- f49a45524a183d50d5962b08249f51b79394a7815f6ddeb89f790901ce452601 title "Taiwan’s Evolving Identity".
- f49a45524a183d50d5962b08249f51b79394a7815f6ddeb89f790901ce452601 url "http://www.wilsoncenter.org/index.cfm?fuseaction=events.event_summary&event_id=31149 Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars".