The Politics of Language in Chinese Education, 1895–1919

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The study examines the origins of the “literary revolution” proclaimed in 1917 which laid the foundation for the replacement of the classical language by the vernacular as China’s national language and medium of national literature. A unique, multifaceted approach is used to explain the political significance of the classical/vernacular divide against the backdrop of social change that followed the Sino-Japanese War of 1894-5. Seeing education as the central battleground for all debates on language, the study in six thoroughly documented chapters investigates the language policy of the Qing and Republican governments, vernacular journalism of the revolutionaries, the activities of urban script reformers, the linguistic thought of the national essence advocates, and the emergence of a scholarly interest in the vernacular in academic circles.

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Preliminary Materials
著者: E. Kaske
页码: i–xx
Chapter Two. The Language Question At The Turn Of The 20th Century
著者: E. Kaske
页码: 77–159
Chapter Three. The Revolutionary Movement And Vernacular Journalism
著者: E. Kaske
页码: 161–232
Chapter Six. From Political Revolution To Literary Revolution
著者: E. Kaske
页码: 391–461
Conclusions
著者: E. Kaske
页码: 463–473
Selected Bibliography
著者: E. Kaske
页码: 475–507
Index And Glossary
著者: E. Kaske
页码: 509–537
Elisabeth Kaske, Ph.D. (2006) in Chinese Studies, Heidelberg University, is Junior Professor of Chinese Studies at Frankfurt University. She has published on the history of late Qing China, including Bismarcks Missionäre: Deutsche Militärinstrukteure in China 1884–1890 (Wiesbaden 2002).
"This volume will be most valuable as a reference volume for linguists and cultural historians. The extensive appendices of newspapers, press runs, circulation and editorial stance offer valuable chronicles of modern journalism. Scholars of language and script reform will find useful perspectives on how even the most popular reforms attract multiple and contradictory antagonists and innovators."
Mary S. Erbaugh, The China Quarterly, 199, September 2009.
All those interested in the intellectual and social history of late Qing and early Republican China, press history, education, sociolinguistics.
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