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Modern Asian Studies (2001), 35: 469-493 Cambridge University Press
Copyright © 2001 Cambridge University Press
doi:10.1017/S0026749X01002074
Published online by Cambridge University Press 18 Apr 2001


Enlightenment and Unity: Language Reformism in Late Qing China


W. K. CHENG  a1
a1 Mills College, Oakland, California

The movement to create a phonetic script for the Chinese language was arguably one of the most arresting and exciting engagements in modern China. While generations of Chinese intellectuals tirelessly applied themselves to sorting out the linguistic technicalities in devising a Chinese phonetic system, what made language reform—or, depending on the perspective taken, revolution—historically so intriguing was that it had been a fiercely contested domain where a fascinating array of ideological positions was staked and contended. As John de Francis has observed, there had always been ‘a significant correlation between attitudes toward social change and attitudes toward linguistic reform in China’. Indeed, Qian Xuantong insisted at the height of the May Fourth New Culture Movement that to destroy Confucianism, one must ‘first dispose of the Chinese language’, whereas the Communist-led latinization movement of the 1930s, for its part, was meant to create a medium for the emergence of a true proletarian culture.



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