HinterNet is off to Asia... This album comprises photographs and notes from our journey to Asia, 2010-2011. The primary subject is Taiwan, our base, along with some excursions...Click here to read about Taiwan in the CIA World Factbook.Click here to read information about Taiwan from the Lonely Planet guidebook.Naturally, all information in external websites is beyond the responsibility of HinterNet. That information is just for background for you, the reader. Some initial images from Taiwan...Street scene in 台北市 (Taipei): the covered sidewalks are a feature one finds all over the Pacific, from Tahiti to Taiwan, as well as in other tropical and semi-tropical climes... even in New Orleans. _____________________________________________________________ Another scene in Taipei... Note one of the many contrasts here between the old and the new: on the left, a traditional food stand next to an ultra-modern store selling Canon cameras. The contrast is highlighted by the fact that the vendor sells 豬血糕 (zhu xie gao), literally, "pig's blood cake". Although the term "cake is used", it's actually shaped like a popsicle (as it's served on a stick); it's sticky rice, cooked in blood, and then rolled in ground peanuts, with a touch of cilantro. For a further description, click here. _____________________________________________________________ Another contrast of old and new... This is in the town of 鶯歌 (Yingge), not far from Taipei. In the foreground are the remains of a traditional Chinese house, while just behind are modern apartments. I have only encountered one case in Taiwan where the owner of a traditional house modernized the interior rather than just sold the property and moved into an apartment. The person I met did a lovely job of fixing the house, and then air-conditioning the interior, putting in good plumbing, etc. If I had the money... _____________________________________________________________ Street scene in Yingge, the hometown of my wife... This street has become a tourist destination (primarily for Taiwanese tourists), and each shop sells teapots, teacups, and other ceramic items, both low-end and high-end. Yingge used to be the main ceramics center in Taiwan, and while it still is important in some sense in its original identity, it has some aspects of a simulacrum... See Jean Baudrillard. Regardless, as tourist destinations go, Yingge did a good job of preserving itself... _____________________________________________________________ Astrid and I in front of the 布政司衙門 (Bu-Cheng-Shih-Szyamen / Bu Zheng Si Yamen), an old government building and now a museum in the Taipei Botanical Gardens. _____________________________________________________________ Taiwan is still in many ways a very conservative place, in the real sense of that word. This sign is outside the girls' dormitory at the university where I work. Very clear... _____________________________________________________________ Some of the rooms in our apartment; it's actually a hotel, run by the university for their Travel & Tourism Program. So, we are living in a hotel suite... No complaints!Our kitchen and dining room... _____________________________________________________________ The view from our window, looking down on the campus and the town of 龜山 (Guishan), which means "Turtle Mountain". The entire area of northern Taiwan has these kinds of low mountains, which have some great hiking trails. Larger mountains are in the eastern portion of the island... _____________________________________________________________ A picture of myself (between Charlotte and Astrid, with arrow) with some of Charlotte's family members, at one of the several welcome banquets we were greeted with... From left to right: Charlotte's father and step-mother; Charlotte; me; Astrid; Charlotte's niece Juliet; Charlotte's second sister-in-law, and her two sons and her husband...
All images and text are the property of Benjamin B. Olshin, and are protected under United States and International copyright law. They may not be copied, reproduced, stored, or manipulated without written permission of the artist.
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Dr. Olshin is the founder and director of S2R — Specialized Research + Reports, a consultancy working in the areas of international research, expert presentations and workshops, and customized consulting services. The firm consults with businesses and institutions on global affairs, cross-cultural communication, and creativity and innovation. Dr. Olshin has consulted in a variety of areas, including international geopolitics, cultural issues in management, and innovation in industry, and has been involved in projects in Sri Lanka, Italy, Portugal, Brazil, Canada, Turkey, Ghana, Japan, Taiwan, Switzerland, and the U.S. Dr. Olshin has delivered numerous presentations and workshops in geopolitical issues, cross-cultural management, and creative strategy in the U.S., Europe, and Asia, and his papers concerning cross-cultural design, innovation, and other topics have appeared in journals in the U.S., Latin America, and West Africa. He completed his M.A. and Ph.D. at the Institute for the History and Philosophy of Science and Technology at the University of Toronto in Canada, and holds a B.A. from Williams College.