The scantily clad young betel nut sales girls, commonly known as binlang hsishi (betel nut beauties), who can be seen in glass booths along roads throughout Taiwan, reflect the country's hybrid culture, an Austrian artist said in Taipei yesterday.
Karl-Heinz Klopf, a public art specialist from Vienna, said that while the betel nut beauty social phenomenon is unique to Taiwan, it actually incorporates many foreign popular culture elements.
TAIPEI TIMES FILE PHOTO
"Their singing and dancing performances integrate Taiwan's folk arts as well as Japanese and Western pop cultures," Klopf said, adding that in his eyes, binlang hsishi is both local and global in character.
Klopf made the remarks prior to his departure after a month-long study tour financed by the Austrian Culture Bureau. Klopf is the first European artist to study Taiwan's binlang hsishih.
He has explored the subject from the perspective of urban development, cultural and sociological perspectives and offered many fresh insights. He has filmed a documentary featuring interviews with betel nut beauties and their employers as well as diverse types of betel nut stands along major streets.
According to his study, Klopf said the betel nut beauties represent a perfect public art, and the phenomenon also epitomizes Taiwan's evolution from an agricultural society to an industrialized one.
Initially, Klopf said, betel nut was only a leisure item among Aborigines, and betel nut trees were generally grown in remote mountainous regions. Over the years, betel nut has become a popular "chewing gum" in local society.
"And the emergence of betel nut beauties is a symbol of Taiwan's transformation into an industrial society," he said.
Betel nut beauties are usually concentrated on the outskirts of major cities. Klopf described betel nut booths as structures situated between urban and rural areas.
Once late at night, Klopf recalled, he drove from downtown Taipei to a highway which had many glass-walled betel nut stands along the side of the road.
"At that time of night, the downtown districts were already shrouded in darkness, but the betel nut booths were all brightly lit. You could see the lights from afar, and they looked like shining stars in the night sky," he said.
Coming from Vienna -- an old city known for its rigorous urban planning and strict architectural rules, Klopf said he took great interest in Taiwan's rampant illegal structures.
The brilliant blue waters, thick foliage and bucolic atmosphere on this seemingly idyllic archipelago deep in the Pacific Ocean belie the key role it now plays in a titanic geopolitical struggle. Palau is again on the front line as China, and the US and its allies prepare their forces in an intensifying contest for control over the Asia-Pacific region. The democratic nation of just 17,000 people hosts US-controlled airstrips and soon-to-be-completed radar installations that the US military describes as “critical” to monitoring vast swathes of water and airspace. It is also a key piece of the second island chain, a string of
A magnitude 5.9 earthquake that struck about 33km off the coast of Hualien City was the "main shock" in a series of quakes in the area, with aftershocks expected over the next three days, the Central Weather Administration (CWA) said yesterday. Prior to the magnitude 5.9 quake shaking most of Taiwan at 6:53pm yesterday, six other earthquakes stronger than a magnitude of 4, starting with a magnitude 5.5 quake at 6:09pm, occurred in the area. CWA Seismological Center Director Wu Chien-fu (吳健富) confirmed that the quakes were all part of the same series and that the magnitude 5.5 temblor was
Taiwan will now have four additional national holidays after the Legislative Yuan passed an amendment today, which also made Labor Day a national holiday for all sectors. The Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) and Taiwan People’s Party (TPP) used their majority in the Legislative Yuan to pass the amendment to the Act on Implementing Memorial Days and State Holidays (紀念日及節日實施辦法), which the parties jointly proposed, in its third and final reading today. The legislature passed the bill to amend the act, which is currently enforced administratively, raising it to the legal level. The new legislation recognizes Confucius’ birthday on Sept. 28, the
The Central Weather Administration has issued a heat alert for southeastern Taiwan, warning of temperatures as high as 36°C today, while alerting some coastal areas of strong winds later in the day. Kaohsiung’s Neimen District (內門) and Pingtung County’s Neipu Township (內埔) are under an orange heat alert, which warns of temperatures as high as 36°C for three consecutive days, the CWA said, citing southwest winds. The heat would also extend to Tainan’s Nansi (楠西) and Yujing (玉井) districts, as well as Pingtung’s Gaoshu (高樹), Yanpu (鹽埔) and Majia (瑪家) townships, it said, forecasting highs of up to 36°C in those areas