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E-grāmata: Engineers and the Two Taiwans: The Abnormal Club

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The identity of Taiwan is a matter of intense local and international debate. This book shows how engineers helped produce two distinct visions of the land of Taiwan and its people, elevating the value of engineering as a career path in the process. The book describes how the technical work of engineers, which typically avoids partisan politics, can actually contribute to partisan differences and conflict. In most countries, the rise of engineering is about the emergence of a single dominant vision of the country. In Taiwan, two distinct visions of the land and its people emerged, owing to the presence of two distinct geographical identitiesislanders and mainlanders.





The distributed mode of production in the electronics industry proved to be transformative and created an abnormal boys club of engineers, as one group called themselves. Because the two communities were influenced by contrasting geographical identities, they felt as though they were working for different Taiwans. 





"What a book. Engineers and the Two Taiwans traces how engineers creatively crafted professional identities and pathways in the cracks of multiple, shifting empires and in so doing helped create Taiwan as a thing-unto-itself. In showing how engineers shaped and were shaped by geopolitics and the birth of a new electronics industry, the book opens up fresh perspectives on longstanding questions about who engineers are, how they are trained, where they ought to work, and ultimately what engineering is for. These engineers did politics through their material commitments even as they avoided partisan politics."

           Jessica M. Smith, Editor-in-chief, Engineering Studies, Professor, Engineering, Design, and Society Department, Colorado School of Mines





"This book explores Taiwans dynamic industrial evolution over the past century through the lens of different engineers social dynamics, identity, values, and compelling narratives. It offers insights into Taiwanese own perceptions in the electronics industry and prompts reflection on how countries navigate domestic and international technology policies and social progress. You will come to appreciate how engineers in Taiwan today bear continuing responsibilities to connect their technical work to its land and people, even when their own commitments differ from one another."

           Minn-Tsong Lin, Deputy Minister, National Science and Technology Council, Taiwan, Distinguished Professor, Department of Physics, National Taiwan University
Abnormal Engineers for an Abnormal Land.- Freelancing around Japanese
Infrastructures.- Climbing Mainland Infrastructures.- Animating Two
Taiwans.- Two Taiwans in the United States.- The Separation Crosses the
Strait.
Kuo-Hui Chang is a policy researcher focusing on power relations between science, technology, and the state. His PhD in science and technology studies at Virginia Tech followed a master's degree in public policy at National Taipei University. From 2021 to 2022, he served as editor-in-chief of the Taiwanese Journal for Studies of Science, Technology and Medicine (STM). His works appear in Engineering Studies, the Korea Journal for History of Science and a number of Chinese journals in Taiwan.





Gary Downey is an ethnographic listener committed to engineering studies, STS making & doing, and making visible the connections between knowledge and personhood. Trained as a mechanical engineer (B.S. Lehigh University) and cultural anthropologist (Ph.D. University of Chicago), he is Alumni Distinguished Professor Emeritus of Science, Technology, and Society and affiliated faculty member emeritus in Womens and Gender Studies and Engineering Education at Virginia Tech. He is the (co-)author or co-editor of six books.





Bono Po-jen Shih is an interdisciplinary scholar working in the intersection of philosophy, history, and sociology of engineering with an eye on contemporary engagement with engineering education and practice. He currently holds a postdoc appointment with two institutions at Penn State University and earlier was a postdoctoral research fellow at the Science History Institute. Shih earned his PhD and MS in science and technology studies (STS), as well as a graduate certificate in engineering education, from Virginia Tech. He earned his BS in electrical engineering from National Taiwan University.