I left home on Nov. 3, and arrived in Taipei on Nov. 4th at 6 am. After 14 hours of flight and 2 more hours of high speed rail ride, I arrived at National Chung Cheng University at noon, very tired. There was a reception dinner at a very fancy Japanese restaurant in the evening, food was beautifully arranged and equally delicious. You have to see their guest house. They give me a VIP room, there are two bedrooms, living room, dining room, and a bath. I wish my family is here to enjoy Taiwan with me.
I was told that there are 15 full time faculty members in the Communication Department. Most of them came out to see two scholars from the west, one is from Simon Fraser University in Canada, and one is from SFSU (you know who she is). I asked each faculty member what he/she teaches. I learned the department is composed of a very interesting mix of experts and here they are: Media Policies, Media Economics, Media psychology, Message design, Health Media, Media ethics, etc. Interesting and very rich.
Here is my first impression about Taiwan.
1. Mountains and hills are so beautiful and so green. I love it!
2. Gentle and respectful people.
3. Great food and presentation is a work of art.
4. Hot Spring
5. A fire which is burning right out of pool of water. It is an awesome sight.
But most of all, I was strucked by the way the Communication department colleagues are treating each other. With gentleness and with respect. I am not accustom to this kind of academic culture in America, at least where I work. As I think about this, I just realize that how Americans are treating each other very harshly. I am not even sure how I could describe this harshness, I can't even find a right word to describe what I see in my colleagues and even in me that we brush off people. On the surface, we may smile with cursory greetings, but there is harshness there or no concern for others. Is this harshness comes from hardness of heart? Is our stress seeping from our everyday actions? We are so disconnected and distrustful. I am sure my Taiwanese colleagues too have academic politics and they too sometimes don't get along. But they still keep coolness and kindness and treat each other with dignity. Something that I can't explain with words, but I recognize that sense of empathy is well cultivated and developed in them, thus they are calm, cool, and yet confident.
What is it that people from the West are so quick to judge others. Is this L-brain driven society makes us to behave this way? Perhaps.
This quiet gentleness and kindness that are demonstrated by these bright professors left a great impression on me. I must note that I didn't see this wonderful quality in Korean colleagues when I visited Korea, I wonder Koreans are more like Americans in this aspect of our life. We are quick to judge others, me included.
I need to find out this unique characteristics in Chinese people. Some may say that Chines don't show their emotion quickly, they keep their emotion in their sleeves, whereas Koreans show their temper quickly. Whatever it is, I am curious to know what makes these people different. I noticed that many young, beautiful, accomplished, second generation Korean-American Women marry Chinese-American men. I asked to my young Korean friend. She said, "Chinese men respect their wives. They do house chores where Korean men don't".
The person from Canada presented something about Media politics. I made my presentation on teaching for future with technology. After the presentation, the department chair, Dr Lo and Peter, took us to a hot spring. I saw a most amazing thing; fire is burning from the water, the water looks like oil that gives fuel to burn. Here is the awesome sight I saw.
After a mud spa, I am relaxed and happy. Also food makes me happy too. I ate this big hot pot beef soup all by myself.
Wednesday, November 05, 2008
I am enjoying my visit to CCC in Taiwan
Posted by Come and See Africa at 1:38 PM
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5 comments:
Professor Kim Foreman,
Many thanks for your kind words about my colleagues and me. We've learned a lot from you actually. We get along with each other very well. Hope to see you soon. By the way, NCCU is often referred to another university in Taiwan, so that my university is better referred to as CCU. Thank you.
Best, Shih-Hung Lo
Just received a commending message from my own supervisor while I was doing my Ph.D. at LSE.
New book on small-scale Digital Storytelling:
"Digital Storytelling, Mediatized Stories: Self-representations in
New Media"
Edited by Knut Lundby (Peter Lang)
Recent years have seen amateur personal stories, focusing on "me"
flourish on social networking sites and in digital storytelling
workshops. The resulting digital stories could be called "mediatized
stories." This book deals with these self-representational stories,
aiming to understand the transformations in the age-old practice of
storytelling that have become possible with the new, digital media.
Among the contributors to this volume are Nick Couldry, Kirsten
Drotner, Nancy Thumim, David Gauntlett, Ola Erstad and John Hartley.
The book draws upon the "Mediatized Stories" project
www.intermedia.uio.no/mediatized/ and also relates to the research on
digital storytelling at QUT in Australia www.cci.edu.au
Says Sonia Livingstone, LSE, London: "In this insightful and original
volume, international scholars draw on an exciting range of
perspectives to understand the transformative potential of digital
media for human expression and recognition of others."
www.intermedia.uio.no/mediatized/publications
www.peterlang.com/index.cfm?vID=310273&vLang=E&vHR=1&vUR=2&vUUR=1
I am glad you like the land and the people you met. I am from Taiwan and proud of who I am. Thank you to look deeply inside the positive characteristics of Taiwanese people and brought it out to share with others via web 2.0.
How nice to be able to have such an experience, Dr. Foreman, and thank you for sharing in such detail! I do believe the stress and business of our lives in America leave people with very little time to remember be gentle and gracious with each other. Imagine if this is so hard for adults, how much more difficult it is for our children? I think it is important that kindness, respect, and being genuine should be ingrained in our young people.
Thank you for your post, it is interesting to read your travel journal. I had no idea that Chinese and Korean men are that different :)
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