In their own words: British Sinologists’ studies on Chinese literature, 1807–1901
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Authors
Ji, Lingjie
Abstract
Adopting a narrow sense of “literature” as the umbrella term for poetry, drama, and
fiction, this research examines the British sinologists’ studies on Chinese literature from
1807 to 1901, and addresses the specific question of how both the knowledge about, as
well as the collective discourse on, Chinese poetry, drama, and fiction were gradually
constructed, narrated, accumulated, and standardized in the English-speaking world in the
nineteenth century. This study brings together, for the first time, a wide range of little
studied sinologists’ writings on Chinese literature, including monographs, journal articles,
prefaces and introductions to translations, and chapters on Chinese literature in books
surveying different aspects of China. Based on extensive archival investigations, this thesis
reconstructs a panoramic view of how these diverse sinological texts acted collectively to
create a body of knowledge about Chinese literature.
Considering sinological literary studies within the historical and literary contexts which
are sketched out in Chapter 2, the remaining three chapters of this thesis examine the
three narrative forms I have identified in the sinologists’ writings on Chinese literature: the
expository, or, direct description and explanation of the characteristics of Chinese
literature, the comparative studies between Chinese and English or European literatures,
and the historical accounts of Chinese literature. With systematic discourse analysis of
these writings, this research aims to unfold the vocabulary and rhetoric, the frameworks
and perspectives, and the narrative strategies employed by the sinologists in the discursive formation of the knowledge about Chinese literature. I argue that such knowledge and
discourse produced in the sinologists’ studies must be understood as the result of the
complex dynamics among multiple literary and cultural factors including the English and
Chinese literary concepts and criticism, the ambivalent cultural attitudes towards China, the
implied influence of British imperial power in China, and the varied purposes and criteria of
individual sinologists. A study on the nineteenth-century British sinologists’ studies on
Chinese literature enables us to trace and explain the historical origins of studies on
Chinese literature in the English scholarship.
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