Description

Book Synopsis
“Information” has become a core concept across the disciplines, yet it is still often seen as a unique feature of the Western world or the digital age. 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.

Trade Review
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 *

Table of Contents
A Note to Readers
Chronology
Foreword by Ann M. Blair
Introduction by Jack W. Chen, Anatoly Detwyler, Xiao Liu, Christopher M. B. Nugent, and Bruce Rusk
Part I: Information Management at the Level of the Word
Section A: Graphs, edited by Christopher M. B. Nugent
1. Graphs, by Zev Handel
2. Script Reform and Alphabetization, by Yurou Zhong
3. Indexing Systems, by Uluğ Kuzuoğlu
4. Character Input, by Thomas S. Mullaney
Section B: Lexicons, edited by Bruce Rusk
5. Early Lexicons, by Zev Handel
6. Rime Tables, by David Prager Branner
7. Later Imperial Lexicons, by Nathan Vedal
8. Early Twentieth-Century Dictionaries, by Yue Meng and Xi Chen
9. Post-1949 Dictionaries, by Jennifer Altehenger
10. App-Based and Online Dictionaries, by Michael Love
Section C: Text and Textual Divisions, edited by Jack W. Chen
11. Sentences, Paragraphs, and Sections, by Dirk Meyer and Lisa Indraccolo
12. Lines, Couplets, and Stanzas, by Jack W. Chen
13. Premodern Punctuation and Layout, by Imre Galambos
14. Modern Punctuation and Layout, by John Christopher Hamm
Section D: Commentaries, edited by Bruce Rusk
15. Early to Middle Period Classical Commentaries, by Michael Nylan and Bruce Rusk
16. Poetry Commentaries, by Michael A. Fuller
17. Fiction Commentaries, by Martin W. Huang
18. Drama Commentaries, by Yuming He
19. Reader’s Guides, by Maria Franca Sibau
Part II: Information Management at the Level of the Document
Section A: Anthologies, edited by Jack W. Chen
20. Early Anthologies, by Michael Hunter
21. Medieval Literary Anthologies, by Xiaofei Tian
22. Later Imperial Poetry Anthologies, by Gregory Patterson
23. Later Imperial Prose Anthologies, by Timothy Clifford
24. Religious Literary Anthologies, by Natasha Heller
25. Premodern Fiction and Fiction Collections, by Ling Hon Lam
26. Premodern Drama Anthologies, by Ariel Fox
27. Modern Literary Anthologies, by Charles A. Laughlin
28. Modern Drama Scripts Anthologies, by Tarryn Li-Min Chun
29. Textbook Anthologies, by Michael Gibbs Hill
Section B: Encyclopedias, edited by Christopher M. B. Nugent
30. Medieval Encyclopedias, by Christopher M. B. Nugent
31. Middle Period Imperial Encyclopedias, by Sarah M. Allen
32. Later Imperial Vernacular Encyclopedias, by Cynthia Brokaw
33. Qing Dynasty Imperial Encyclopedias, by Stefano Gandolfo
34. Twentieth-Century Vernacular Encyclopedias, by Joan Judge
35. Online Encyclopedias and Wikis, by Shaohua Guo
Section C: Histories, edited by Anatoly Detwyler
36. Early Histories, by Griet Vankeerberghen
37. Early Medieval Histories, by Zeb Raft
38. Dynastic Histories from Tang to Song, by Anna M. Shields
39. Late Imperial Histories, by Devin Fitzgerald
40. Literary Histories, by Theodore D. Huters
Part III: Information Management at the Level of the Collection
Section A: Libraries, Museums, and Archives, edited by Xiao Liu
41. Libraries from the Early Period to the Tang, by Michael Nylan
42. Libraries from Song to Qing, by Ronald C. Egan
43. Late Imperial Literary Archives, by Kaijun Chen
44. Modern Libraries, by Jidong Yang
45. Modern Literature Museums and Archives, by Kirk A. Denton
46. Document Services, by Xiao Liu
47. Thematic Research Collections, by Donald Sturgeon
Section B: Bibliographies and Indices, edited by Bruce Rusk and Xiao Liu
48. Early Bibliographies, by Michael Nylan
49. Medieval Bibliographies, by Evan Nicoll-Johnson
50. Later Imperial Bibliographies, by Stefano Gandolfo
51. Twentieth-Century Bibliographies, by Anatoly Detwyler
52. Indices and Concordances, by Donald Sturgeon
Section C: Serial Publications, edited by Anatoly Detwyler and Xiao Liu
53. Premodern Literary Collectanea, by Suyoung Son
54. Modern Literary Collectanea, by Robert J. Culp
55. Literary Newspapers and Tabloids, by Alexander Des Forges
56. Literary Journals, by Jianli Li
57. Overseas Chinese Newspapers, by Carlos Rojas
58. Internet Literature, by Jin Feng
Bibliography
Contributors
Index of People and Select Institutions
Index of Documents, Publications, and Electronic Resources

Literary Information in China A History

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    A Hardback by Bruce Rusk, Anatoly Detwyler, Christopher Nugent

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      Publisher: Columbia University Press
      Publication Date: 11/05/2021
      ISBN13: 9780231195522, 978-0231195522
      ISBN10: 0231195524
      Also in:
      History

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      “Information” has become a core concept across the disciplines, yet it is still often seen as a unique feature of the Western world or the digital age. 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.

      Trade Review
      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 *

      Table of Contents
      A Note to Readers
      Chronology
      Foreword by Ann M. Blair
      Introduction by Jack W. Chen, Anatoly Detwyler, Xiao Liu, Christopher M. B. Nugent, and Bruce Rusk
      Part I: Information Management at the Level of the Word
      Section A: Graphs, edited by Christopher M. B. Nugent
      1. Graphs, by Zev Handel
      2. Script Reform and Alphabetization, by Yurou Zhong
      3. Indexing Systems, by Uluğ Kuzuoğlu
      4. Character Input, by Thomas S. Mullaney
      Section B: Lexicons, edited by Bruce Rusk
      5. Early Lexicons, by Zev Handel
      6. Rime Tables, by David Prager Branner
      7. Later Imperial Lexicons, by Nathan Vedal
      8. Early Twentieth-Century Dictionaries, by Yue Meng and Xi Chen
      9. Post-1949 Dictionaries, by Jennifer Altehenger
      10. App-Based and Online Dictionaries, by Michael Love
      Section C: Text and Textual Divisions, edited by Jack W. Chen
      11. Sentences, Paragraphs, and Sections, by Dirk Meyer and Lisa Indraccolo
      12. Lines, Couplets, and Stanzas, by Jack W. Chen
      13. Premodern Punctuation and Layout, by Imre Galambos
      14. Modern Punctuation and Layout, by John Christopher Hamm
      Section D: Commentaries, edited by Bruce Rusk
      15. Early to Middle Period Classical Commentaries, by Michael Nylan and Bruce Rusk
      16. Poetry Commentaries, by Michael A. Fuller
      17. Fiction Commentaries, by Martin W. Huang
      18. Drama Commentaries, by Yuming He
      19. Reader’s Guides, by Maria Franca Sibau
      Part II: Information Management at the Level of the Document
      Section A: Anthologies, edited by Jack W. Chen
      20. Early Anthologies, by Michael Hunter
      21. Medieval Literary Anthologies, by Xiaofei Tian
      22. Later Imperial Poetry Anthologies, by Gregory Patterson
      23. Later Imperial Prose Anthologies, by Timothy Clifford
      24. Religious Literary Anthologies, by Natasha Heller
      25. Premodern Fiction and Fiction Collections, by Ling Hon Lam
      26. Premodern Drama Anthologies, by Ariel Fox
      27. Modern Literary Anthologies, by Charles A. Laughlin
      28. Modern Drama Scripts Anthologies, by Tarryn Li-Min Chun
      29. Textbook Anthologies, by Michael Gibbs Hill
      Section B: Encyclopedias, edited by Christopher M. B. Nugent
      30. Medieval Encyclopedias, by Christopher M. B. Nugent
      31. Middle Period Imperial Encyclopedias, by Sarah M. Allen
      32. Later Imperial Vernacular Encyclopedias, by Cynthia Brokaw
      33. Qing Dynasty Imperial Encyclopedias, by Stefano Gandolfo
      34. Twentieth-Century Vernacular Encyclopedias, by Joan Judge
      35. Online Encyclopedias and Wikis, by Shaohua Guo
      Section C: Histories, edited by Anatoly Detwyler
      36. Early Histories, by Griet Vankeerberghen
      37. Early Medieval Histories, by Zeb Raft
      38. Dynastic Histories from Tang to Song, by Anna M. Shields
      39. Late Imperial Histories, by Devin Fitzgerald
      40. Literary Histories, by Theodore D. Huters
      Part III: Information Management at the Level of the Collection
      Section A: Libraries, Museums, and Archives, edited by Xiao Liu
      41. Libraries from the Early Period to the Tang, by Michael Nylan
      42. Libraries from Song to Qing, by Ronald C. Egan
      43. Late Imperial Literary Archives, by Kaijun Chen
      44. Modern Libraries, by Jidong Yang
      45. Modern Literature Museums and Archives, by Kirk A. Denton
      46. Document Services, by Xiao Liu
      47. Thematic Research Collections, by Donald Sturgeon
      Section B: Bibliographies and Indices, edited by Bruce Rusk and Xiao Liu
      48. Early Bibliographies, by Michael Nylan
      49. Medieval Bibliographies, by Evan Nicoll-Johnson
      50. Later Imperial Bibliographies, by Stefano Gandolfo
      51. Twentieth-Century Bibliographies, by Anatoly Detwyler
      52. Indices and Concordances, by Donald Sturgeon
      Section C: Serial Publications, edited by Anatoly Detwyler and Xiao Liu
      53. Premodern Literary Collectanea, by Suyoung Son
      54. Modern Literary Collectanea, by Robert J. Culp
      55. Literary Newspapers and Tabloids, by Alexander Des Forges
      56. Literary Journals, by Jianli Li
      57. Overseas Chinese Newspapers, by Carlos Rojas
      58. Internet Literature, by Jin Feng
      Bibliography
      Contributors
      Index of People and Select Institutions
      Index of Documents, Publications, and Electronic Resources

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