This research explores how Indigenous knowledge systems in Taiwan are being revitalized through video games.

2025 ANU TAIWAN UPDATE
Gaming Taiwan: Indigenous Epistemologies in Play

This research explores how Indigenous knowledge systems in Taiwan are being revitalized through video games. Far from mere entertainment, these games draw on tribal traditions, ancestral stories, and deep connections to the land to create meaningful digital experiences. By blending oral storytelling with interactive gameplay, Taiwanese Indigenous game developers are preserving cultural memory while challenging colonial legacies. Titles like Princess Baleng, Tayal, VuVu, and Gadvia show how games can empower communities and pass down wisdom to younger generations in innovative and engaging ways. Gamers not only play a game but also immerse themselves in digital environments shaped by Indigenous perspectives and values. This study encourages all engaged audiences, including educators and students, to consider video games as powerful tools for cultural resurgence and learning. Focusing on Indigenous Taiwan, it highlights how digital games integrate historical consciousness and interactivity to reimagine the past and future of the island.

Event Speakers

Chia-rong Wu

Chia-rong Wu is an Associate Professor in the Department of Global, Cultural and Language Studies at the University of Canterbury, New Zealand. He is the author of Remapping the Contested Sinosphere: The Cross-cultural Landscape and Ethnoscape of Taiwan (2020) and co-editor of Taiwan Literature in the 21st Century: A Critical Reader (2023).

Conference

Details

Date

In-person

Location

CIW Seminar Room, Building 188 Fellows Lane, ANU

Cost

FREE

Event speakers

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