Time and Language: New Sinology and Chinese History

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China’s past and present have been in a continuous dialogue throughout history, one that is heavily influenced by time and language: the temporal orientation and the linguistic apparatus used to express and solidify identity, ideas, and practices. Presenting a host of in-depth case studies, Time and Language: New Sinology and Chinese History argues for and demonstrates the significance of “New Sinology” by restoring the role of language/philology in the research and understanding of how modern China emerged. Reading the modern as a careful and ongoing conversation with the past renders the “new” in a different perspective. This volume is a significant step toward a new historical narrative of China’s modern history, one wherein “ruptures” can exist in tandem with continuities. The collection accentuates the deep connection between language and power—one that spans well across China’s long past—and hence the immense consequences of linguistic-related methodology to the comprehension of power structures and identity in China.

Each of the essays in this volume tackles these issues, the methodological and the thematic, from a different angle but they all share the Sinological prism of analysis and the basic understanding that a much longer timeframe is required to make sense of Chinese modernity. The languages examined are diverse, including modern and classical Chinese, as well as Manchu and Japanese. Taken together they bring a spectrum of linguistic perspectives and hence a spectrum of power relations and identities to the forefront. While the essays focus on late Qing and early twentieth-century eras, they refer often to earlier periods, which are necessary to making real sense of later eras. The methodological and the thematic do not only converge, but also generate a plea for fostering and expanding this approach in current and future studies.

Author(s): Ori Sela, Zvi Ben-Dor Benite, Joshua A. Fogel
Publisher: University of Hawaii Press
Year: 2023

Language: English
Pages: 300
City: Honolulu

Cover
Contents
Introduction: Time, Text, and History in China / Ori Sela, Zvi Ben-Dor Benite, and Joshua A. Fogel
1. Tulišen’s Embassy to Distant Territories: The Travels of a Text / Peter C. Perdue
2. Struggles over the Historical Memory of a Heterodoxy: Chinese Commentaries on the Nestorian Stele / Chu Pingyi
3. How Much Does an Understanding of History Help? Naitō Konan’s Reading of “Communism” in China / Joshua A. Fogel
4. To “Turn the Historical Clock Back”: Past, Text, and the Politics of Yuan Shikai’s Monarchy / Zvi Ben-Dor Benite
5. Wenxue and New Practices of Writing in Post-1840 China / Theodore Huters
6. Cai Yuanpei’s Politico-Philosophical Languages / Peter Zarrow
7. Vernacular Knowledge in Time: Sinology outside the Archive / Joan Judge
8. In Search of a Standard National Language in Republican China / Janet Y. Chen
9. A Guangxu Renaissance? Manchu Language Studies in the Late Qing and Their Republican Afterlife / Mårten Söderblom Saarela
10. The Textual Time Machine: Truth, Facts, and the Shuowen, 1770–1932 / Ori Sela
11. A Time to Heal or a Time to Kill: Confessions in the Anti-Shaman Campaign at Communist Yan’an, 1944–1945 / Kang Xiaofei
Bibliography
Contributors
Index