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National Museum of Taiwan Literature

Coordinates: 22°59′30.0″N 120°12′16.0″E / 22.991667°N 120.204444°E / 22.991667; 120.204444
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(Redirected from Guojia Taiwan Wenxueguan)
National Museum of Taiwan Literature
國立臺灣文學館
Map
Established17 October 2003
LocationWest Central, Tainan, Taiwan
Coordinates22°59′30.0″N 120°12′16.0″E / 22.991667°N 120.204444°E / 22.991667; 120.204444
TypeMuseum
Visitors150,000 (2007)
DirectorNikky Lin[1]
CuratorLee Ruiteng (李瑞騰)
Websitenmtl.gov.twm
Exhibits inside the museum
The museum was a government building of the former Tainan Prefecture during Japanese rule.

The National Museum of Taiwan Literature (NMTL; Chinese: 國立臺灣文學館; pinyin: Guólì Táiwān Wénxuéguǎn) is a museum located in Tainan, Taiwan. Operated by Taiwan's Ministry of Culture, the museum researches, catalogs, preserves, and exhibits literary artifacts, and is also the first national literature museum in Taiwan.[2] As part of its multilingual, multi-ethnic focus, it holds a large collection of local works in Taiwanese, Japanese, Mandarin and Classical Chinese.

It was planned as a national-level organization to fill in a long-perceived gap in how modern Taiwanese institutions had handled Taiwanese literature as a field of academic inquiry and popular discourse. Tainan was chosen for its historical significance as a cultural center.

As of May 2023, it houses a collection of approximately 130,000 items. Formerly the Tainan Prefectural Hall, the museum was repurposed as the venue for the National Museum of Taiwan Literature in Jan. 2003, marking an important case of "historical building reuse" in official architecture in Taiwan.[3] On November 10 of the same year, it was officially designated as a national historic site.

History

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The museum is housed in the Tainan Prefecture Hall [zh], itself a national historical monument. The building was constructed in 1916 during the Japanese rule of Taiwan.[4]

In November 1990, the Cultural Construction Committee of the Executive Yuan (now the Ministry of Culture) convened the National Culture Conference, where scholars and experts called for setting an authoritative institution for the collection and research of Taiwanese literary materials. In 1992, the original office of the Tainan City Government, formerly the Tainan Prefectural Hall, was chosen for the purpose. After administrative coordination and advocacy by scholars, the National Museum of Taiwan Literature was established and opened in 2003.[3] In 2007, it was established as a fourth-level central administrative agency and officially named the National Museum of Taiwan Literature.[5] In 2021, it was promoted to a third-level central institution.

Taiwan Literature Base, established in 2014 and affiliated with National Museum of Taiwan Literature, is situated within Qidong Street Japanese Houses, the Japanese-style dormitory complex on Chidong Street in Taipei City.[6]

Features

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The National Museum of Taiwan Literature combines the national historic site of the Tainan Prefectural Hall with new construction. Parts of the historic building, the original Tainan Prefectural Hall, were completely destroyed by incendiary bombs fired by US forces during World War II. After the war, it underwent minor repairs, first serving as the Air Force Supply Command Headquarters and then becoming the Tainan City Government Hall. After the repairs, the historic section was largely restored to its Japanese-period appearance and was listed as a national historic site under the name Former Tainan Prefectural Hall. The post-war additions converted it into a new building with two floors above ground and three floors underground.[3]

The museum houses the cultural heritage research center of Bureau of Cultural Heritage.[7]

Transportation

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The museum is accessible within walking distance South West from Tainan Station of the Taiwan Railways.[8]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "詩人林亨泰之女接任台文館館長 李永得:期許講述更多台灣動人故事 - 自由藝文網".
  2. ^ Lin, Jui-ming (2003). "搭起一座台灣文學的橋樑" [Building a Bridge for Taiwanese Literature]. Newsletter of National Museum of Taiwan Literature (1): 1.
  3. ^ a b c Fan, Shengxiong; Chen, Bo-sen; Huang, Bin; Fu, Chao-ching (2011). 舊建築新生命:從臺南州廳到國立臺灣文學館 [Old Buildings, New Life: From Tainan Prefectural Government to the National Museum of Taiwan Literature]. Tainan: National Museum of Taiwan Literature.
  4. ^ "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2014-02-02. Retrieved 2014-02-04.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  5. ^ Hsu, Chia-hua (2023). 博物館品牌分析:以敘事觀點探討「國立臺灣文學館」與「拾藏:臺灣文學物語」 [Analysis of Museum Brands from the Narrative Perspective: A Case Study on “National Museum of Taiwan Literature” and “NMTL’s Archive Select”]. National University of Tainan. p. 78.
  6. ^ "About TLB - Literary / Cultural Heritage and Architecture".
  7. ^ "About us". Ministry of Culture. Retrieved 17 June 2021.
  8. ^ "National Museum of Taiwan Literature". Lonely Planet. Retrieved 17 June 2021.
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