New Books in Chinese Studies

Yurou Zhong, "Chinese Grammatology: Script Revolution and Literary Modernity, 1916-1958" (Columbia UP, 2019)

Jul 15, 2021
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Episode notes
1
Introduction
00:00 • 5min
2
Uro Jung, Book Review - Chinese Gramatology
04:35 • 3min
3
The Dicotome of the New Baroi
07:17 • 5min
4
The Nature of New Baroi Is a Colloqualized Written Language
11:55 • 3min
5
What Are the Three Trajectories of the Book?
15:16 • 6min
6
Phonocentric Antinomies
20:53 • 2min
7
I Love Chapter One and Two
23:11 • 6min
8
The Toning Letter System of the Chinese Alphabet
28:44 • 2min
9
The Chinese Bid for Alphabetic Uniformity
30:51 • 4min
10
The Chinese Latinization Movement
35:21 • 4min
11
The Biggest Difference Between Romanization and Latinization
39:43 • 3min
12
The Romanization Disagreement With Romanization
43:03 • 3min
13
The Macification of Literature and Art
46:06 • 4min
14
Can Subaltern Workers Write? Chapter Three
50:15 • 2min
15
What Is the Connection Between James Yen's Encounter With the Chinese Laborers?
52:04 • 3min
16
Aen's Retrospective Naming Is a False Categorization Promise of Purality
54:52 • 4min
17
The Laborers, Footing Ens Writing
59:09 • 3min
18
The Convergence of Latinization Movement, National Salvation and Mass Education
01:01:52 • 5min
19
The End of the Script Revolution
01:06:32 • 3min
20
How Did the Chinese Character Survive?
01:09:35 • 3min
21
Idio Phonographs in the Chinese Tradition
01:12:52 • 5min
22
Is There Much Work to Do for Both Language and Writing?
01:18:13 • 5min