Showing posts with label chinese characters. Show all posts
Showing posts with label chinese characters. Show all posts

Landscape and Power in Early China: The Crisis and Fall of the Western Zhou 1045-771 BC Review

Landscape and Power in Early China: The Crisis and Fall of the Western Zhou 1045-771 BC
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Landscape and Power in Early China: The Crisis and Fall of the Western Zhou 1045-771 BC ReviewThis book is a splendid tour de force of historical and textual analysis. Armed with a vast knowledge of China, the author retells the history of one of its most fascinating dynasties, shattering not a few myths along the way. He makes his case masterfully, and by the end the reader is left with a deep and abiding feeling of satisfaction.
Yet surprisingly enough for a book as dense as this one, it reads like a thriller, complete with perplexing mysteries, royal intrigue, and a fantastic cast of characters. I was able to read most of it in one sitting.Landscape and Power in Early China: The Crisis and Fall of the Western Zhou 1045-771 BC Overview

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The Languages of China Review

The Languages of China
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The Languages of China ReviewThe book is divided into two parts. Part I examines the Chinese language and the Chinese dialects while Part II surveys the other languages spoken and written in China.
The book offers fascinating historical, grammatical, and political, insights; for example about possible reasons why the north is more unified than the south (easily traversed northern plains vs. isolating southern valleys and mountains).
Westerners often say that Chinese is a language without grammar simply because it's uninflected. This is grossly wrong and Ramsey describes the rudiments of Chinese's positional grammar and how the grammatical rules change somewhat from dialect to dialect. He also gives many examples of morphemes and words and how different dialects put them together.
As for political insight, I am no fan of China's repressive government and its policies. But when it comes to the cultural and linguistic minorities, its policies are surprisingly tolerant and have been for centuries. When we think that as recently as the 1950s, the French government was still trying to suppress the Gaelic language of Bretagne (Breton) we must wonder if there isn't something we can learn from Chinese policies. After all China has for centuries been making room for its minorities, and when Mandarin (putonghua) was created and adopted as the national common speech, much was made that it was no one's native tongue.
I personally wasn't very interested in the other languages of China, but they get the same, though shorter, descriptive treatment of their history and grammar. On the other hand, one real failure of the book is that all the examples are romanized (pinyin) but almost always without the corresponding Chinese characters. This is a pity since with them the book would have certainly been more useful as a study aid. I suppose in 1987 it was much harder (and expensive) to typeset Chinese passages in English books.
All in all, a fascinating survey of the linguistic landscape of China.
Vincent Poirier, TokyoThe Languages of China Overview

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The Ambivalence of Creation: Debates Concerning Innovation and Artifice in Early China Review

The Ambivalence of Creation: Debates Concerning Innovation and Artifice in Early China
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The Ambivalence of Creation: Debates Concerning Innovation and Artifice in Early China ReviewThis is a review of The Ambivalence of Creation by Michael Puett.
I don't think I've ever said this in a review before, but already from the Introduction I knew that this book showed genuine brilliance. This volume is an excellent illustration of how being an original (even iconoclastic) thinker depends on a serious scholarly understanding of what has been said on your topic before.
It is common in comparative studies to assume "a contrast between a Chinese emphasis on the continuity of nature and culture and a Western emphasis on discontinuity" (3). In other words, according to the received view, "we" have always believed that human culture is something artificial that breaks with the natural world, while "they" have always believed that culture is simply a development of the natural world. Confucius's statement that "I transmit but do not create" (Analects 7.1) is taken to be paradigmatic of Chinese culture from its inception. What Puett shows, however, is that there actually was immense variety in ancient Chinese views regarding innovation. The position that became orthodoxy and entered Western consciousness as "the" Chinese view was just one among several that were hotly contested.
One of the most innovative aspects of Puett's approach is to examine mythological narratives regarding sages, ministers and rebels as evidence of debates over innovation. It is common to observe that we do not possess, for China, a coherent mythology of the kind that we have in ancient Greece and Rome. Instead, we find fragments of often conflicting stories. The assumption has been, though, that there was some underlying coherent narrative, and that with sufficient ingenuity we can reconstruct it. Puett calls this assumption into question, and argues that "instead of searching for some authentic, or earlier, mythology, the goal should be to understand why, in each case, a particular narrative, or a particular version of a more common narrative, is given" (98).
When we apply this approach, we find the following narrative possibilities. (i) "Negative creations were assigned to rebels or barbarians, while sages were then posed as simply appropriating and putting to proper use that which the evil figure had created" (138). We see this position in the "Lv Xing" chapter of the Documents. (ii) "Sages were organizers rather than creators" and "acts of creation by rebels were denied" (138). This is the kind of view exemplified by the Confucian Mencius. (iii) "The state was formed through creation, not organization, and ... such creations were undertaken by sages not rebels" (139). We see this model in philosophical texts like the Mozi.
Puett shows how these narratives continued to be selectively used in later debates. When the "First Emperor" of the Qin state conquered and unified all of China, he utilized the narrative of sages as radical creators as a justification for his sweeping innovations in government. After the fall of the Qin, the Han emperor "Wudi was able to use the first emperor in the same way that so many narratives of the creation of the state had used evil creators like Chi You, namely as a transgressor responsible for the negative aspects of the introduction of new instruments of governance. Wudi could then present himself as a consolidator like Huangdi, appropriating those new elements and organizing them into a proper role" (176).
The last part of Puett's book is a fascinating reflection on the complex figure of Sima Qian. On its surface, Sima Qian's classic Records of the Historian might seem like a rigidly orthodox and somewhat unimaginative recounting of Chinese history as it was commonly understood by people in his era. However, scholars have begun to recognize that Sima Qian subtly encodes his opinions and judgments in his telling of history. (Stephen Durrant's The Cloudy Mirror is a good introduction.) So Puett is not original in seeing subtle undercurrents in Sima Qian's historical writings. However, his particular take is new and ingenious.
Sima Qian says that Confucius "created" the Spring and Autumn Annals (a famous yet cryptic historical work). When Sima Qian is asked whether he is putting himself in a league with Confucius by writing the Records of the Historian, he denies it. He is, he claims, "transmitting but not creating." But notice that, in saying this, Sima Qian is quoting what Confucius says of himself, in order to claim that he (Sima Qian) does not see himself as like Confucius (!). (177-78) Puett also notes some intriguing comments in Sima Qian's biography of the sage Bo Yi. Sima Qian suggest that Confucius had distorted the story of Bo Yi for didactic purposes, and that there is a degree of arbitrariness in the decision to historically emphasize Bo Yi, when so many other worthies have been lost to history simply because no one talked about them. "Sima Qian is claiming to zuo [create], but he is also arguing that such acts involve arbitrariness and construction" (181).
According to Puett, Sima Qian gives us yet another narrative of creation. It is similar to the first narrative above (i), which was like the one the Han emperor Wudi used. However, "he denies that the transgression of the act of creation can be divorced from the later appropriation of what was created. In other words, he denies the mechanism that had been used to allow for acts of creation while also denying their negative implications" (210-11). Hence, "the narrative of the rise of empire becomes a meditation on the tragedy of creation. ...creation is both necessary and yet outside the moral and natural cycles that should normatively define the historical process" (211). (Once again, Puett is making a revisionist claim, because it is common to say that Chinese thought does not recognize the possibility of tragedy in life, the way that the West has since the Greek tragedians.)
I was already very impressed when I finished Puett's final chapter (on Sima Qian), but then I went on to read his appendix on the etymology of the character ZUO (to create). He notes that there is "a common tendency among philologists...to search for the most precise understanding of a term by attempting to find its earliest possible meaning, a search that frequently involves the further assumption that such an earlier meaning would tend to be more concrete than later senses" (220). I have to admit that I tended to assume something like this myself. However, as Puett points out, there is no good reason to believe that this methodology is warranted. Humans have been using language for as long as there have been humans, so there is no reason to assume that the earliest samples of human writing we have access to are more "concrete" and less "abstract" than ordinary language is in general. Furthermore (and this is something I was aware of, but it bears repeating since it is so often forgotten), "the claim that the earliest known form of a graph provides a clue to the root meaning of a word is indefensible. The decision to use a certain graph to represent a word may be based on no other criteria than ease of writing or phonetic links to other words for which a graph already exists" (221).
After reading this, I set the book aside and, sighing to Heaven, exclaimed, "Ah! How fine are such words!" (That's my feeble effort to mimic ancient Chinese prose. Sorry.) To put things in more modern terms, there are so many disappointing books and articles that get published, that I feel rejuvenated as a scholar when I read something so vibrant, provocative and well-argued as this.The Ambivalence of Creation: Debates Concerning Innovation and Artifice in Early China Overview

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Beyond the Great Mountains: A Visual Poem about China Review

Beyond the Great Mountains: A Visual Poem about China
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Beyond the Great Mountains: A Visual Poem about China ReviewFrom the moment you open this book you will be pleasently surprised, you'll notice that this book is read from top to bottom. And from that first page you get to read the full poem from start to finish first before even lifting a page.
The pages are made from rice paper as well and the illustrations from simply tearing paper and paint. If your like me, your hands will imediately go to each page expecting to feel that soft texture threads that rice paper has, or the texture of thick quick strokes of paint and then being sadly disappointed when you feel regular plain old paper pages. The rainbow of colors used are bright and so very rich!
I love that the last two page show the Chinese characters both ancient & modern characters side by side so you can see how the characters changed from then to now. The Chinese characters are mountain peaks, tree, east, water, rain, river, boulder, through, sun, moon, many plants, metal, rice, hanging grain, ice, bamboo, hanging leaves, leek, fruit on a vine, hemp, west, salt, wine, jade, kindgon, center or middle and fire.
I also love that in the middle of the author's notes inside a light pink circle in the middle of the page are thesewise and beautiful words....
Be open to inspriation,
Inspiration leads to creativity.
Be open to play.
In play we see mistakes
as stepping-stones to fulfillment.
Be open to challenges,
Challenges offer us a chance to grow,
Be open to work.
It is in the willingness to labor
that we mature
and find excellence.Beyond the Great Mountains: A Visual Poem about China Overview

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