Literary Information in China
A History
Xiao Liu editor Jack W Chen editor Bruce Rusk editor Anatoly Detwyler editor Christopher Nugent editor
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Columbia University Press
Published:28th Jun '21
Should be back in stock very soon
“Information” has become a core concept across the disciplines, yet it is still often seen as a unique feature of the Western world that became central only in the digital age. In this book, leading experts turn to China’s textual tradition to show the significance of information for reconceptualizing the work of literary history, from its beginnings to the present moment.
Contributors trace the organization of literary information across China’s three millennia of history, examining the forms and practices of information management that have evolved alongside the increasing scale and complexity of textual production. They reimagine literary history as information processing, detailing the many kinds of storage, encoding, sorting, and transmission that constitute and feed back into China’s long and ever-growing cultural tradition. The volume features state-of-the-field essays on all major forms of literary information management, from graphs to internet literature, and from commentaries to literary museums and archives. By shifting focus from individual works and their authors to the informatic schemata of literature, it identifies three scales of information management—the word, the document, and the collection—and surveys the forms that operate at each level, such as the dictionary, the anthology, and the library.
Literary Information in China is a groundbreaking work that provides a systematic and innovative reassessment of literary history with implications that extend beyond the particular Chinese context, revealing how informatic practices shape literary tradition.
This impressive volume provides a comprehensive and wonderfully detailed account of the mechanisms of textual organization, replication, proliferation, and dissemination from ancient China to the age of the internet. From the zi and graphs to the making of anthologies, encyclopedias, archives, histories, and so on, the authors collectively bring the enduring infrastructure of the literary (wen) to light. -- Lydia H. Liu, author of The Freudian Robot: Digital Media and the Future of the Unconscious
This is a wonderful and magisterial effort of editing, writing, and thinking—astonishing in the breadth of its coverage and in the depth of its scholarship. Together these essays provide an enormous step forward in our understanding of the ways information, literature, and culture work together to create the landscape of our communicative lives. -- Eric Hayot, author of Humanist Reason: A History. An Argument. A Plan
This extensive collection of first-rate essays is an impressive exploration of the history, range, and significance of Chinese literary production. From the beginnings of the complex Chinese writing system to contemporary methods and forms of textual composition and preservation, contributors present a scholarly tour de force: unmissable reading for anyone interested in one of the world’s most important textual traditions. -- Elaine Treharne, author of Text Technologies: A History
Literary Information in China breaks new ground in Chinese studies. This book is bound to generate new dialogues between Chinese cultural history and linguistics, library science, museum studies, digital humanities, and big data. The collection will become an indispensable reference for scholars of Chinese studies. -- Ning Ma, author of The Age of Silver: The Rise of the Novel East and West
This compilation richly deserves wide attention; it seems destined to inspire, or perhaps to provoke, a wave of new research using its insights. -- Robert E. Hegel * Journal of Chinese Studies *
An ambitious undertaking. It amounts to no less than an attempt to reconstruct Sinology from the ground up. -- Victor H. Mair * Modern Chinese Literature and Culture *
An important contribution and recommended to all with an interest in historicizing contemporary politics of information. -- Laura Skouvig * Journal of the Association for Information Science and Technology *
An impressive accumulation of material and reflections on how different kinds of information were and are still dealt with in various types of texts in the Chinese world. -- Marie Bizais-Lillig * Journal of the American Oriental Society *
ISBN: 9780231195522
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
672 pages