Ideogram: Chinese Characters and the Myth of Disembodied Meaning

Bìa trước
University of Hawaii Press, 31 thg 10, 2003 - 214 trang
In this latest book, J. Marshall Unger exposes the historical, scientific, cultural, and practical flaws accompanying the widespread belief that Chinese characters embody pure, language-less meaning. Whether one is interested in Chinese characters from the standpoint of language, literature, semiotics, psychology, history, cultural studies, or computers, Ideogram contains new ideas and insights that are sure to challenge preconceptions and provoke thought.
 

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Agony and bliss
1
Cryptograms vs pictograms
20
The Great Wall of China and other exotic fables
40
Dave Barry vs the intellectuals
54
How would a magician memorize Chinese characters?
71
Lord Chesterfield and the Mandarins
84
Where do hunches come from?
111
In the basement under the Chinese Room
131
Converging strands can ideogram be salvaged?
151
Notes
169
References
177
Index
191
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Giới thiệu về tác giả (2003)

J. Marshall Unger is Emeritus Professor of Japanese at Ohio State University. His research has focused on the history of Japanese, teaching Japanese as a second language, and writing systems of East Asia. Two of his books, The Fifth Generation Fallacy and Literacy and Script Reform in Occupation Japan, are available in Japanese.

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