• Home
  • About
  • Films
  • Life
  • Music

Life

Latest
  • Latest
  • Oldest
  • Random
  • A to Z

What Disappears During an Outbreak

EnglishLife
·July 23, 2021·3 min read
It’s likely that a lot of bars or nightclubs will disappear during the current outbreak—particularly smaller establishments that eke out a living with what few customers they have Read More

Having Faith in a Secular World

BooksEnglishLife
·July 20, 2021·6 min read
Joshua E. Livingston’s Sunrays on the Beachhead of the New Creation, a book with 54 short stories with black and white graphic illustrations that serve the tales beautifully and integrally, deals with what it means to have faith (specifically Christian faith), and what it takes to have faith when our daily reality is decidedly secular. When secularism is practically a religion, what does it mean to believe, be spiritual, and attempt to see beyond ourselves? Does life have no meaning beyond what we are capable of understanding?  Read More

Pioneering in Ordinary Life

EnglishInterviewsLife
·July 6, 2021·15 min read
New Bloom/No Man is an Island editor Brian Hioe interviewed Lance and Stuart Chen-Hayes, who recently published 兩個爸爸. This follows up on an interview conducted following the publication of Double Dads One Teen in English in 2019. Lance is Taiwan’s first out gay dad and their nonbinary teen, Kalani, became the first Taiwanese citizen with two father’s names on both an international birth certificate and an international marriage license Read More

An Attempt to Revive Marx’s Workers’ Inquiry

BooksEnglishLife
·June 22, 2021·3 min read
Workers’ Inquiry and Global Class Struggle: Strategies, Tactics, Objectives, edited by Robert Ovetz, is an ambitious book Read More

A Tale of Two May 4ths

EnglishLife
·May 7, 2021·4 min read
A few years ago during the one-hundredth year anniversary of the May 4th Movement, when members of the pan-Blue camp, along with various Chinese nationalists, were outraged by the Tsai administration instead commemorating the date as “May the Fourth be with You”—Star Wars Day, I guess you could call it Read More

Animatronic Hells and Goddesses with GPS

EnglishLife
·April 20, 2021·5 min read
Temple festivals in Taiwan often seem to be a mixture of the sacred and the profane. Sure, temples are places of worship—but temple festivities often have elements of what would otherwise be considered “low” culture incorporated into them Read More

When in Taiwan: The Color of Your Skin

EnglishLife
·April 13, 2021·18 min read
To be a child of globalization comes with an inconceivable sense of perpetual displacement—a disturbance of sort: the fault lines between distant societies or “civilizations” are deeply felt in the space you occupy, the people you interact with, and the commonplace cross-cultural misunderstandings you observe Read More

Everyone is an Island

EnglishLife
·March 23, 2021·3 min read
There are no answers in the vast endless ocean...only questions Read More

Which Ways Forward for Green Politics in Taiwan?

BooksEnglishLife
·March 16, 2021·3 min read
Dafydd Fell’s recent academic monograph, Taiwan’s Green Parties: Alternative Politics in Taiwan, is not to be missed for those who are interested in or who study party politics in Taiwan. Drawing on close to a decade of research and observation, the book details the ebbs and flows, as well as the transformations, experienced by the Green Party in Taiwan since its founding. The book also focuses on the Social Democratic Party and Trees Party as Green Parties Read More

Book Review: The People, No: A Brief History of Anti-Populism

BooksEnglishLife
·February 9, 2021·5 min read
In 2016, Trump shocked liberal Democrats. They should not have been shocked. It takes a certain level of ignorance and magic thinking to believe in their candidate at the time. Hilary Clinton, after all, is the spouse of a president whose trade policies were largely responsible for the closing of factories and deindustrialization of the nation Read More

Reading Havel in Hong Kong—And Arendt in Bangkok

BooksEnglishLife
·February 2, 2021·2 min read
What follows, written at a time when news is coming out of both Hong Kong and Thailand of young activists facing prison time for speaking out for things they believe, is the English language original of the preface of Vigil: Hong Kong on the Brink Read More

Staging Hakka-ness: ‘Stir-fry’ and its Path to New Identities

EnglishEventsLife
·January 21, 2021·5 min read
“The winner of the 2020 National Hakka Stir-fry Culinary Competition goes to A-Wu’s Shop!”, announced Andre Chiang, the lead judge of the final round judges’ panel. The crowd cheered as the restaurant owner and chefs headed up to the stage to claim their trophy and banner Read More
Load More
COPYRIGHT © NEW BLOOM MAGAZINE
  • About
  • Contact
Start typing to see results or hit ESC to close
Hong Kong film Taiwanese film Chinese Nationalist Party Umbrella Movement C-LAB
See all results