Repository logo
Log in(current)
Repository logoMIT Open ScholarshipDSpace@MIT
  1. Home
  2. MIT Libraries
  3. MIT Theses
  4. Graduate Theses
  5. Damp Skin: Portraits of Taiwanese Domesticity, Resilience, and Otherness

Damp Skin: Portraits of Taiwanese Domesticity, Resilience, and Otherness

Thumbnail Image
Download
Name

Chan-chanch-smarchs-arch-2024-thesis.pdf

Description
Thesis PDF
Size

95.48 MB

Format

Adobe PDF

Checksum (MD5)

a3db1ae92d55ebcf7c78dfa9b1e2fb87

Author(s)
Chan, Cheng-Hsin
Advisor(s)
Shieh, Rosalyne
Date Issued
May 2024
Publisher
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Abstract
This thesis is an intricate exploration of Taiwanese life under the constant dampness, weaving together the present with historical threads and personal memories of home and motherhood alongside broader socio-historical narratives. It examines Taiwanese domesticity through the dual prisms of “dampness” and “enclosure failure” to reveal how these elements influence or fail to meet Taiwanese people’s physical comfort and needs. Central to this research is exploring the historical marginalization of the Taiwanese body in domestic spatial development under the influence of external powers. Damp Skin unfolds through three intertwined registers that offer diverse materials and perspectives spanning time and space, providing a layered understanding of Taiwanese history and contemporary experiences: I. Home, Memory, and Motherhood, II. Planetary Climate and Body, and III. Domesticity and Architectural Enclosure in Taiwan. This thesis argues the continuous repositioning of our bodies (ourselves and family) in response to external factors — climate, society, and power. It serves to revisit the past, document the present, and speculate on the future, enhancing our understanding of everyday life in Taiwan and exploring potential cultural adaptations. Each thread collects materials and offers distinct perspectives on Taiwanese identity and space’s historical and contemporary shaping. Together, they form portraits of the complexities and nuances of Taiwanese domesticity, resilience, and otherness, framed through the intimate and expansive lens of dampness and enclosure.
MIT Department
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Architecture
Terms of Use
In Copyright - Educational Use Permitted
https://rightsstatements.org/page/InC-EDU/1.0/
Copyright retained by author(s)
Persistent DSpace Link
https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/157342
Repository logo
PrivacyPermissionsAccessibilityContact us
Repository logo
Notify us about copyright concerns.