• Produktbild: Brush Conversation in the Sinographic Cosmopolis
  • Produktbild: Brush Conversation in the Sinographic Cosmopolis

Brush Conversation in the Sinographic Cosmopolis Interactional Cross-border Communication using Literary Sinitic in Early Modern East Asia

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Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Einband

Taschenbuch

Erscheinungsdatum

29.01.2024

Abbildungen

schwarz-weiss Illustrationen, Raster, schwarz-weiss, Tabellen, schwarz-weiss

Herausgeber

David C. S. Li + weitere

Verlag

Taylor & Francis

Seitenzahl

360

Maße (L/B/H)

23,4/15,6/2 cm

Gewicht

549 g

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-0-367-49942-6

Beschreibung

Rezension

"Grounded in the most recent research on language, writing, and literary culture in premodern sinographic East Asia, David C. S. Li et al.?s exciting new Brush Conversation in the Sinographic Cosmopolis breaks new ground in this heretofore neglected field of study at the intersection of Literary Sinitic, sinography, diplomatic history, and East Asian cultural and intellectual exchange. The first book-length collection in English on the topic, this volume mobilizes an impressive range of East Asian brush talk scholars and covers numerous pre- and early modern East Asian polities. The results force us to take seriously pre- and early modern East Asian ?synchronous writing-mediated cross-border face-to-face communication? and the multi-faceted written records that this unique cultural practice produced."---Prof. Ross King, University of British Columbia

"In this ground-breaking volume, scholars specializing in the languages and cultures of Japan, Korea, Vietnam, China, and the Ryukyus (Okinawa) plumb the historical record to reveal and analyze the fascinating array of written "brush talk" conversations that survive in the historical record. These conversations provide insights into the worlds of diplomacy, travel, espionage, and war, bringing to life a now-vanished cross-national culture with a shared foundation in Classical Chinese language and texts. The different book chapters, despite their separate authorship, are unified by a sophisticated theoretical framework. Combining scholarly rigor with dramatic storytelling, this book is the only scholarly investigation of brush talk that looks at the phenomenon with such a wide lens. As part of the current interest in the "Sinographic Cosmopolis" prior to the 20th century, this book is sure to be of interest to scholars of East Asian history, culture, language, and texts."---Prof. Zev Handel, Department of Asian Languages & Literature, University of Washington

"Everybody working on East Asia knows what brush talk is, the use of Sinitic (literary Chinese) to conduct a silent conversation, and everybody knows how useful it was (and still can be) for communication between speakers of different languages, such as Chinese, Japanese, Korean and Vietnamese. But that is the limit of what everybody knows, for brush talk has been extraordinarily neglected by historians, in spite of the fact that plenty of records of these written conversations survive today. This enthralling collection of essays redresses the balance by focusing on the phenomenon of brush talk in all its extraordinary variety. Koreans, Japanese and Ryukyuans shipwrecked on the Chinese coast had no alternative but to resort to brush talk to explain who they were and to find out where they had landed, so long as at least one member of the crew had some command of Sinitic. Vietnamese diplomats, like most diplomats in premodern East Asia, had little or no knowledge of any form of spoken Chinese and were forced to rely on interpreters, but for social interactions as well as for more intellectual exchanges they turned to brush talk. The essays in this pathbreaking book explore the uses of brush talk in different contexts and between speakers of various languages, they consider the value of the written records of brush conversations that survive and they weigh up the implications for attitudes towards spoken languages in premodern East Asia. This is a stimulating and fascinating book, and one that rightly draws attention to a crucially important means of communication between peoples in East Asia".--- Prof. Peter Kornicki, University of Cambridge

Produktdetails

Einband

Taschenbuch

Erscheinungsdatum

29.01.2024

Abbildungen

schwarz-weiss Illustrationen, Raster, schwarz-weiss, Tabellen, schwarz-weiss

Herausgeber

Verlag

Taylor & Francis

Seitenzahl

360

Maße (L/B/H)

23,4/15,6/2 cm

Gewicht

549 g

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-0-367-49942-6

EU-Ansprechpartner

Taylor & Francis Verlag GmbH
Kaufingerstraße 24
80331 München
DE
GPSR@taylorandfrancis.com

Herstelleradresse

Taylor & Francis Group
5 Howick Place
SW1P 1WG London
UK
GPSR@taylorandfrancis.com

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Die Leseprobe wird geladen.
  • Produktbild: Brush Conversation in the Sinographic Cosmopolis
  • Produktbild: Brush Conversation in the Sinographic Cosmopolis
  • Frontispiece 1

    Frontispiece 2

    List of Figures

    List of Tables

    List of Contributors

    Foreword to Brush Conversation in the Sinographic Cosmopolis: the second miracle xvii

    Preface

    Epigraph

    Map

    1 Writing-mediated cross-border communication face-to-face: from Sinitic brush-talk (漢文筆談) to pen-assisted conversation

    DAVID C. S. LI, REIJIRO AOYAMA AND WONG TAK-SUM

    2 East Asian brush-talk literature: introduction and proposed classification

    WANG YONG

    PART 1

    Brush-talk involving traveling literati and boat drifters in East Asia

    3 Brush conversation between maritime officials and foreign seafarers in drifting records in eighteenth-and nineteenth-century East Asia

    MATSUURA AKIRA AND REIJIRO AOYAMA

    4 Senzaimaru’s maiden voyage to Shanghai in 1862: brush conversation between Japanese travelers and people they encountered in Qing China

    DAVID C. S. LI AND REIJIRO AOYAMA

    5 Identity verification and negotiation through Sinitic brush-talk in Ming China and Japan: drifting accounts by Ch’oe Pu (1488) and Yi Chi-hang (1696–1697)

    HUR KYOUNG-JIN

    6 A study of salient linguistic features of two Ryukyuan brush conversations in Sinitic, 1611 and 1803

    WONG TAK-SUM

    PART 2

    Brush-talk involving diplomatic envoys in East Asia

    7 Sinitic brush-talk between Vietnam and China in the eighteenth century: a study of vice-envoy Lê Quý Đôn’s mission to Qing China

    NGUYỄN TUẤN-CƯỜNG AND N GUYỄN THỊ-TUYẾT

    8 Lingua-cultural characteristics of brush-talk: insights from Ōkōchi Documents 大河內文書

    WANG BAOPING

    9 The charm and pitfalls of Sinitic brush-talk: a study of brush conversation records involving the first legation staff of Late Qing China in Japan (1870s–1880s)

    LIU YUZHEN

    10 Japanese-Korean brush-talk during the early Edo period, 1603–1711

    KOO JEA-HYOUN AND JOO IAN

    11 Brush-talk between Chosŏn envoys and Tokugawa literati: contesting cultural superiority and ‘central efflorescence’ 中華, 1711–1811

    JANG JIN-YOUP

    PART 3

    Script-specific communication in Sinitic: significance for historical pragmatics, cultural anthropology, and East Asian studies

    12 Sociocultural functions of Chinese characters and writing: transnational brush-talk encounters in mid-nineteenth- and early-twentieth- century East Asia

    REIJIRO AOYAMA

    13 Discussion paper

    REBEKAH CLEMENTS

    Index