Can the Young Adults Speak? Poetry from the Sunflower and Umbrella Movements

This article explores political aspirations of young adults of Taipei and Hong Kong by analysing the poems written during the Sunflower Movement and the Umbrella Movement. Poetry is a vehicle to convey ideas to the audience. Reading these poems from Taipei and Hong Kong, one can notice several disti...

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Main Author: Wen-chi Li
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Edinburgh 2020-07-01
Series:Forum
Online Access:http://journals.ed.ac.uk/forum/article/view/4478
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author Wen-chi Li
author_facet Wen-chi Li
author_sort Wen-chi Li
collection DOAJ
description This article explores political aspirations of young adults of Taipei and Hong Kong by analysing the poems written during the Sunflower Movement and the Umbrella Movement. Poetry is a vehicle to convey ideas to the audience. Reading these poems from Taipei and Hong Kong, one can notice several distinctive characteristics. First, the poets have established a broad dichotomy: the upper and the lower, violence and resistance, eloquence and silence, lies and truth, and hypocrisy and morality. Second, poetry is a field for multiplicity. Focusing more on everyday practices, sometimes vulgar, filthy, and obscene, these poems correspond to Bakhtin’s theory of carnival in which wordplay, mimicry, and irony open a space for renewal and rebirth. Additionally, Derrida’s concept of dissemination can help to examine the linguistic slippage that indirectly subverts authority. After investigating protest poetry, the author asks if the young adults can speak. The youth’s voices can definitely be heard when it comes to the concept of “the democracy to come”. The “democracy to come,” conceptualised by Derrida to replace the notion of the future, cannot be reduced to a simple idea, but remains unpredictable, so as to allow itself always to be full of possibilities.
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spelling doaj.art-ec18d679485a4c71a981be34bdbe2e272022-12-22T16:20:00ZengUniversity of EdinburghForum1749-97712020-07-013010.2218/forum.30.44784478Can the Young Adults Speak? Poetry from the Sunflower and Umbrella MovementsWen-chi LiThis article explores political aspirations of young adults of Taipei and Hong Kong by analysing the poems written during the Sunflower Movement and the Umbrella Movement. Poetry is a vehicle to convey ideas to the audience. Reading these poems from Taipei and Hong Kong, one can notice several distinctive characteristics. First, the poets have established a broad dichotomy: the upper and the lower, violence and resistance, eloquence and silence, lies and truth, and hypocrisy and morality. Second, poetry is a field for multiplicity. Focusing more on everyday practices, sometimes vulgar, filthy, and obscene, these poems correspond to Bakhtin’s theory of carnival in which wordplay, mimicry, and irony open a space for renewal and rebirth. Additionally, Derrida’s concept of dissemination can help to examine the linguistic slippage that indirectly subverts authority. After investigating protest poetry, the author asks if the young adults can speak. The youth’s voices can definitely be heard when it comes to the concept of “the democracy to come”. The “democracy to come,” conceptualised by Derrida to replace the notion of the future, cannot be reduced to a simple idea, but remains unpredictable, so as to allow itself always to be full of possibilities.http://journals.ed.ac.uk/forum/article/view/4478
spellingShingle Wen-chi Li
Can the Young Adults Speak? Poetry from the Sunflower and Umbrella Movements
Forum
title Can the Young Adults Speak? Poetry from the Sunflower and Umbrella Movements
title_full Can the Young Adults Speak? Poetry from the Sunflower and Umbrella Movements
title_fullStr Can the Young Adults Speak? Poetry from the Sunflower and Umbrella Movements
title_full_unstemmed Can the Young Adults Speak? Poetry from the Sunflower and Umbrella Movements
title_short Can the Young Adults Speak? Poetry from the Sunflower and Umbrella Movements
title_sort can the young adults speak poetry from the sunflower and umbrella movements
url http://journals.ed.ac.uk/forum/article/view/4478
work_keys_str_mv AT wenchili cantheyoungadultsspeakpoetryfromthesunflowerandumbrellamovements