The Chinese Language: Fact and Fanstasy: Difference between revisions

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[[:en:The Chinese Language: Fact and Fantasy]]
[[:en:The Chinese Language: Fact and Fantasy]]
{{Infobox Book
| name          = The Chinese Language
| title_orig    =
| translator    =
| image        = [[Image:Defrancis.jpg|Cover of the paperback edition]]
| image_caption = Cover of the paperback edition
| author        = [[John DeFrancis]]
| illustrator  =
| cover_artist  =
| country      =
| language      = English
| series        =
| subject      =
| genre        = Nonfiction
| publisher    = University of Hawai'i Press
| release_date  = 1984
| english_release_date =
| media_type    = Hardcover, Paperback
| pages        = 330
| isbn          = ISBN 0-8284-0866-5, ISBN 0-8248-1068-6 (paperback)
| preceded_by  =
| followed_by  =
}}
'''''The Chinese Language: Fact and Fantasy''''' is a book written by [[John DeFrancis]], published in 1984 by University of Hawaii Press. The book describes some of the concepts underlying the [[Chinese language]] and [[writing system]], and gives the author's position on a number of ideas about the language.
==Main points==
* There is not a unique "[[Chinese language]]". There is a group of related ways of speaking, which some may call [[dialect]]s, others call [[topolect]]s (a [[calque]] of Chinese [[wikt:方言|方言]], fāngyán; DeFrancis uses the term "[[regionalect]]s"), and still others would regard as separate [[language]]s, many of which are not [[Mutual intelligibility|mutually intelligible]]. One such variant, based on the [[Beijing dialect|speech]] of the [[Beijing]] area, has been chosen as the [[standard language]] in the [[People's Republic of China]], and is now known as "[[Putonghua]]", or common language.
* The [[Written Chinese|Chinese writing system]] has a heavy [[Phonology|phonological]] basis, shown in the phonetic elements common in more than 95% of [[Chinese character]]s. Unfortunately they are missing from many common characters, and were removed from numerous "simplified" characters, causing many scholars to miss the point that they are a necessary resource for Chinese readers. It is not a brilliant [[Ideogram|ideographic]] script; it is a poor [[Phoneme|phonetic]] script.
* Although there are characters in the [[Written Chinese|Chinese writing system]] that visually represent concepts, such as 一 二 三 for ''one'', ''two'', and ''three'', Chinese writing is not ideographic in the sense that the symbols represent ideas divorced from language. There can be no such thing as a completely ideographic writing system, where there would be [[symbol]]s to stand for all possible individual concepts and where [[morphemes]] or [[phoneme]]s would play no significant role in writing individual words. For instance, most Chinese words are written as [[Chinese character#Phono-semantic compounds|phono-semantic compounds]] that include a non-ideographic, phonetic element.
* The Chinese script, with its huge number of [[Chinese character|characters]], its complexity and its irregularities, is harmful to the [[literacy]] improvement efforts of the [[Chinese people|Chinese society]], and needs to be replaced by a more efficient [[writing system]] if China is to achieve the benefits of modernization.
==Six myths==
A good portion of the book is devoted to debunking what DeFrancis calls the "six myths" of Chinese characters.  The myths are:
* '''''The Ideographic Myth''''': Chinese characters represent ideas instead of sounds.
* '''''The Universality Myth''''': Chinese characters enable speakers of mutually unintelligible languages to read each other's writing.  (Also, to the extent this is possible, this is due to a special property that only Chinese characters have.)  Furthermore, Chinese from thousands of years ago is immediately readable by any literate Chinese today.
* '''''The Emulatability Myth''''': The nature of Chinese characters can be copied to create a universal script, or to help people with learning disabilities learn to read.
* '''''The Monosyllabic Myth''''': All words in Chinese are one syllable long.  Alternatively, any syllable found in a Chinese dictionary can stand alone as a word.
* '''''The Indispensability Myth''''': Chinese characters are necessary to represent Chinese.
* '''''The Successfulness Myth''''': Chinese characters are responsible for a high level of literacy in East Asian countries.  (A weaker version of this myth is simply that despite the flaws of Chinese characters, East Asian countries still have a high level of literacy.)
All of these are dealt with in separate chapters, at length, in the book.
== See also ==
* [[:en:Varieties of Chinese]]
== External links ==
* [http://www.alvestrand.no/books/chinese-language.php A review of the book] <!-- (note that the review author inserted the text above, so this is NOT a copyright violation) -->
* [http://www.pinyin.info/readings/chinese_language.html Table of contents of the book and a sample chapter]
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{{science-book-stub}}
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Revision as of 05:57, 29 January 2010

Local Lede

en:The Chinese Language: Fact and Fantasy

The Chinese Language  
Cover of the paperback edition
Cover of the paperback edition
Author John DeFrancis
Language English
Genre(s) Nonfiction
Publisher University of Hawai'i Press
Publication date 1984
Media type Hardcover, Paperback
Pages 330
ISBN ISBN 0-8284-0866-5, ISBN 0-8248-1068-6 (paperback)

The Chinese Language: Fact and Fantasy is a book written by John DeFrancis, published in 1984 by University of Hawaii Press. The book describes some of the concepts underlying the Chinese language and writing system, and gives the author's position on a number of ideas about the language.

Main points

  • There is not a unique "Chinese language". There is a group of related ways of speaking, which some may call dialects, others call topolects (a calque of Chinese 方言, fāngyán; DeFrancis uses the term "regionalects"), and still others would regard as separate languages, many of which are not mutually intelligible. One such variant, based on the speech of the Beijing area, has been chosen as the standard language in the People's Republic of China, and is now known as "Putonghua", or common language.
  • The Chinese writing system has a heavy phonological basis, shown in the phonetic elements common in more than 95% of Chinese characters. Unfortunately they are missing from many common characters, and were removed from numerous "simplified" characters, causing many scholars to miss the point that they are a necessary resource for Chinese readers. It is not a brilliant ideographic script; it is a poor phonetic script.
  • Although there are characters in the Chinese writing system that visually represent concepts, such as 一 二 三 for one, two, and three, Chinese writing is not ideographic in the sense that the symbols represent ideas divorced from language. There can be no such thing as a completely ideographic writing system, where there would be symbols to stand for all possible individual concepts and where morphemes or phonemes would play no significant role in writing individual words. For instance, most Chinese words are written as phono-semantic compounds that include a non-ideographic, phonetic element.
  • The Chinese script, with its huge number of characters, its complexity and its irregularities, is harmful to the literacy improvement efforts of the Chinese society, and needs to be replaced by a more efficient writing system if China is to achieve the benefits of modernization.

Six myths

A good portion of the book is devoted to debunking what DeFrancis calls the "six myths" of Chinese characters. The myths are:

  • The Ideographic Myth: Chinese characters represent ideas instead of sounds.
  • The Universality Myth: Chinese characters enable speakers of mutually unintelligible languages to read each other's writing. (Also, to the extent this is possible, this is due to a special property that only Chinese characters have.) Furthermore, Chinese from thousands of years ago is immediately readable by any literate Chinese today.
  • The Emulatability Myth: The nature of Chinese characters can be copied to create a universal script, or to help people with learning disabilities learn to read.
  • The Monosyllabic Myth: All words in Chinese are one syllable long. Alternatively, any syllable found in a Chinese dictionary can stand alone as a word.
  • The Indispensability Myth: Chinese characters are necessary to represent Chinese.
  • The Successfulness Myth: Chinese characters are responsible for a high level of literacy in East Asian countries. (A weaker version of this myth is simply that despite the flaws of Chinese characters, East Asian countries still have a high level of literacy.)

All of these are dealt with in separate chapters, at length, in the book.

See also

External links