臺灣在戰後初期去殖民化的時代背景中,有關日治時期高等教育發展的延續,目前主要以制度史與政策研究為主,然而不同學術領域具體內容的繼受與轉型,以及個別行動者的角色,有待進一步考察。 戰後初期,官方對日治時期殖民地的學術成果,採取「知識的接收」政策,日本考古學者國分直一(1908-2005)在戰後留用4年期間,整理臺灣考古學與民族學的文獻及標本資料,且透過在臺灣大學史學系的教學與田野工作,培育並影響了戰後臺籍第一代的人類學家。本文分析國分直一在戰後臺灣歷史轉型過程中,在整理臺灣研究學術成果與教育扮演承先啟後的角色,以及戰後初期臺灣史前文化的解釋模式,從多源到單源的轉變。
Current scholarly literature on the development of Taiwan studies during the immediate postwar era in the historical milieu of decolonialization, is focused on the transformation of higher education, particularly concerning institutional transition and reconstruction policies. However, changes in the contents and developments in various academic fields have yet to be fully apprehended. This paper uses the case of Japanese scholar Kokubu Naoichi (1907-2005), the sole archaeologist in early postwar Taiwan in the field of prehistoric and ethnological studies to shed light on the actual postwar official policy of knowledge retrieval of academic scholarship of the colonial period. Kokubu Naoichi was retained as a Japanese faculty member at National Taiwan University until his return to Japan in the summer of 1949. During his stay in postwar Taiwan, he taught archaeology and prehistoric Taiwan in the History Department and helped reconstruct the ethnological museum of the former Imperial Taipei University as the specialist curator. Through his teaching and comprehensive field surveys, he trained the first generation of Taiwanese anthropologists in early postwar Taiwan. However, under the influence of fierce Chinese nationalism in early postwar Taiwan, this study also indicates that the prewar studies of the multiple origins of Taiwanese prehistory and aboriginal cultures, of which Kokubu was a main contributor, were gradually rewritten in the official discourse stressing a single Chinese mainland origin.
國分直一,臺灣大學史學系,留用政策,人類學,史前史
Kokubu Naoichi, History Department of NTU, Retention policy, Anthropology, Prehistorical History.