Lwazi Bululu

Fallism and Chiang Kai-Shek Statue Removal in Taiwan as a Means of Mobilization

Midterm elections are around the corner and there has been a plethora of ballot box issues to choose from that will prove decisive in key races: from Indigenous issues, incumbents’ COVID response, alleged corruption, and so on. But one issue that is not going to feature at all will be that of transformative justice and the unresolved issue of the biggest symbol of authoritarianism: the bronze statue of Chiang Kai-Shek at the Chiang Kai-Shek Memorial. Which begs the question of the purpose of political iconoclasm, or image breaking, as a form of performative democracy...
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Lwazi Bululu

Lwazi Bululu, a native of South Africa, is currently earning his BA in Global Studies focusing on International Politics and Social Movements in Asia at the University of North Carolina Chapel Hill. His research interests include grassroots human rights advocacy, black philosophical and political thought, and developmentalism.