英文摘要 |
In the 1960s, Myron L. Cohen from the United States started his anthropological research in Meinong, a Hakka town in southern Taiwan. The ethnographic fieldwork has not only established the materials and field data collected in different periods, but also made his works accumulate into a ''family''understanding of the Hakka culture in southern Taiwan and become one of the important research in Taiwan Hakka study. In Cohen's main works, it presents a variety of research methods for analyzing different types of field materials. From the early ethnographic vision directly derived from longterm participation in observation, it gradually joined the category of historical anthropology, such as family document analysis. This article summarizes Cohen's contributions to Hakka research in Taiwan by reviewing Cohen’s half-century works and publications. |