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Learning to Drink Sorghum Liquor: Taste and Consumption in Military Front-Line Jinmen, Taiwan

[journal article]

Chi, Chang-hui

Abstract

This article asks why sorghum liquor, once a drink choice representing the taste of a dominant class, became a token of Jinmen identity among the islands’ dominated local population. Being a Cold War battlefield, war-stricken Jinmen became a symbol of the Kuomintang government’s determination to rec... view more

This article asks why sorghum liquor, once a drink choice representing the taste of a dominant class, became a token of Jinmen identity among the islands’ dominated local population. Being a Cold War battlefield, war-stricken Jinmen became a symbol of the Kuomintang government’s determination to recover mainland China. Military authoritarianism transformed Jinmen’s society in countless ways, including consumer fashions. The mass production of sorghum liquor began in 1953, with the military promoting its taste and establishing consumption of the liquor as part of a masculine ethos. This inspired mimicry among local consumers. Sorghum liquor became a local “traditional drink,” and a signifier for an identity that revolved around its consumption. This development arose from local consumers seizing on their limited freedom by making this consumption choice and making it their own under military authoritarian rule. Consumption and taste thus gave new meanings to local identity and community subjectivity.... view less

Keywords
Taiwan; anthropology; alcohol consumption; authoritarian system; identity formation; regional identity; alcohol consumption habits; historical development; martial law; military dictatorship; subjectivity

Classification
Ethnology, Cultural Anthropology, Ethnosociology
Sociology of Economics

Free Keywords
Social Sciences; Anthropology; Taiwan; Jinmen; sorghum liquor; consumption; identity; authoritarianism

Document language
English

Publication Year
2018

Page/Pages
p. 165-191

Journal
Journal of Current Chinese Affairs, 47 (2018) 2

Issue topic
The Making and Operation of Everyday Authoritarianism in Taiwan during the Cold War

ISSN
1868-4874

Status
Published Version; reviewed

Licence
Creative Commons - Attribution-NoDerivs 3.0


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© 2007 - 2025 Social Science Open Access Repository (SSOAR).
Based on DSpace, Copyright (c) 2002-2022, DuraSpace. All rights reserved.