Print Email Facebook Twitter How did Japanese colonial buildings in Taiwan manifest Japan's intention to change Taiwanese identity? Title How did Japanese colonial buildings in Taiwan manifest Japan's intention to change Taiwanese identity? Author Yang, Wan-Yu (TU Delft Architecture and the Built Environment; TU Delft History & Complexity) Contributor Lee, Rachel (mentor) Degree granting institution Delft University of Technology Programme Architecture, Urbanism and Building Sciences Project AR2A011 Date 2021-04-15 Abstract Architectures were used as a crucial tool to change Taiwanese self-identity during the Japanese rule of Taiwan because architecture is closely related to people's lives. Although Japan is not the most prolonged colonial regime in Taiwan's history, there are still many traces of Japan left in life in Taiwan nowadays. Because the Japanese set the colonial blueprint more comprehensively on the entire Taiwan. Therefore, for different purposes, the types of buildings are diverse, and the scale of construction covers everything from urban planning to building material specifications. In this thesis, I will mainly study Japanese-style houses in Taiwan, which have accelerated the change of Taiwanese self-identity to a certain extent. Subject AR2A011Colonial ArchitectureTaiwan To reference this document use: http://resolver.tudelft.nl/uuid:c3ea22f6-7b3e-4cdc-9194-645882c5861c Part of collection Student theses Document type student report Rights © 2021 Wan-Yu Yang Files PDF 20210415_Final_Thesis_Wan ... u_Yang.pdf 5.28 MB Close viewer /islandora/object/uuid:c3ea22f6-7b3e-4cdc-9194-645882c5861c/datastream/OBJ/view