英文摘要 |
Hakka texts in Taiwans local gazetteers in the early Qing have long been regarded as the source of constructing the history of the people who speak Hakka. Moreover, scholars frequently use them as a means to trace the historical origins, to analyze the population distribution, and to construct the history of the land that the Hakka people reclaimed. However, the local gazetteers had repeatedly provided a strongly negative impression over the images of the Hakka people, and proclaimed that they originated from the Chao-zhou region, speaking the Chao-zhou dialect (close to Minnan dialect). That leads us to rethink the previous methods of reading the gazetteers, and to re-focus on the backgrounds of the authors and their intentions. This paper argues that instead of viewing these Hakka-related texts from local gazetteer as the photo-similar images, it is more appropriate to view them as a mirror which reflects the social dimensions of early Qing Taiwan. |