European University Institute Library

Dialect and nationalism in China, 1860-1960, Gina Anne Tam

Label
Dialect and nationalism in China, 1860-1960, Gina Anne Tam
Language
eng
Index
index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
Dialect and nationalism in China, 1860-1960
Medium
electronic resource
Nature of contents
dictionaries
Oclc number
1119747014
Responsibility statement
Gina Anne Tam
Series statement
Cambridge books online
Summary
Taking aim at the conventional narrative that standard, national languages transform 'peasants' into citizens, Gina Anne Tam centers the history of the Chinese nation and national identity on fangyan - languages like Shanghainese, Cantonese, and dozens of others that are categorically different from the Chinese national language, Mandarin. She traces how, on the one hand, linguists, policy-makers, bureaucrats and workaday educators framed fangyan as non-standard 'variants' of the Chinese language, subsidiary in symbolic importance to standard Mandarin. She simultaneously highlights, on the other hand, the folksong collectors, playwrights, hip-hop artists and popular protestors who argued that fangyan were more authentic and representative of China's national culture and its history. From the late Qing through the height of the Maoist period, these intertwined visions of the Chinese nation - one spoken in one voice, one spoken in many - interacted and shaped one another, and in the process, shaped the basis for national identity itself
Table Of Contents
Introduction -- 1. A Chinese Language: Fangyan before the twentieth century -- 2. Unchangeable Roots: Fangyan and the Creation of the Chinese National Language -- 3. The Sounds of Authenticity: Defining Linguistic Modernity in Republican China -- 4. The People's Language: Fangyan under the CCP -- 5. The Mandarin Revolution: The Great Leap to a Standard Language -- Epilogue -- Works Cited
Content
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