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An American pioneer of Chinese Studies in cross-cultural perspective : Benjamin Bowen Carter as an agent of global knowledge / by Yeung Man Shun.

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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Yeung, Man Shun, author.
Series:
East and West (Leiden, Netherlands) ; Volume 12.
East and West (Leiden, Netherlands) ; Volume 12
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Carter, Benjamin Bowen, 1771-1831.
Carter, Benjamin Bowen.
China--Study and teaching--United States--History--19th century.
China.
United States--Foreign relations--China.
United States.
China--Foreign relations--United States.
United States--Foreign relations--1783-1815.
China--Foreign relations--18th century.
Chinese language--Study and teaching--History.
Chinese language.
Sinologists--United States--Biography.
Sinologists.
Physical Description:
1 online resource.
Place of Publication:
Leiden, The Netherlands ; Boston : Brill, [2021]
Summary:
Benjamin Bowen Carter (1771-1831), one of the first Americans to speak and read Chinese, studied Chinese in Canton and advocated its use in diplomacy decades before America established a formal relationship with China. Drawing on rediscovered manuscripts, this book reconstructs Carter's multilingual learning experience, reveals how he helped translate a diplomatic document into Chinese, describes his interactions with European sinologists, and traces his attempts to convince the US government and American academics of the practical and cultural value of Chinese studies. The cross-cultural perspective employed in this book emphasizes the reciprocal dynamics of Carter's relationships with Chinese and European "others," while Carter's story itself forces a rewriting of the earliest years of US-China relations.
Contents:
Acknowledgments
Appendixes
List of Illustrations
Abbreviations
1 On the Linguistic Frontier in Canton
A Cross-Cultural Approach to Language Learning
1.1 The Earliest Glimmer of Chinese Studies in America
1.2 Recovering Carter's Story: Perspectives and Approaches
1.3 Learning the Language of the Other: The Place of Chinese Studies in Europe and America
2 Finding a Calling
Carter's Transcontinental Journey to Chinese Studies
2.1 Restless in America: Family and Early Life
2.2 Opportunities in China: 1798-1806
2.3 Fulfillment in Europe and Disappointment at Home: 1806-1831
2.4 From Curiosity to a Lifelong Pursuit
3 Reconstructing a Personalized Curriculum
Textbooks, Dictionaries, and Study Notes
3.1 Learning Chinese the Chinese Way
3.2 From Linguistic Translation to Cultural Translation
3.3 Entering the Chinese World: Carter's Chinoiserie Letter to Conseequa
4 Chinese Instructors and Their Anglophone Students
A Reappraisal
4.1 Learning Chinese in Canton and Macao
4.2 Abel Yen and His Anglophone Students
4.3 Language Instructor as Diplomatic Translator
4.4 The American Consul Wishes for an Interpreter
5 Agent of Global Knowledge: Carter in London, Paris, and New York
5.1 Career Ambition: Consul Interpreter
5.2 An Early American Encounter with European Sinology
5.3 Academic Ambition: University Educator
6 The Rise of American Chinese Studies: Changes in Foreign Policy, Academic Foci, and American Perceptions of China
6.1 Carter's View of China and the Chinese
6.2 American Curiosity about Chinese Knowledge
6.3 The Missionary Roots of the American Sinological Tradition
6.4 The Interpreter as Diplomat
6.5 America's First Course in Chinese Studies
6.6 The Chinese Language: Barrier or Gateway?
6.7 The Treasures in the Cushing Collection
7 Concluding Remarks: Carter in Perspective
7.1 The Origin of Chinese Studies in America: An Alternative Pathway
7.2 Teaching and Learning Chinese in China at the Turn of the Nineteenth Century
7.3 Creation, Exchange, and Circulation of Chinese Knowledge on a Global Scale
7.4 Cross-Cultural Dialogues: Carter, the Canton Dialect, and Contemporary China-America Relations
Appendix
Bibliography
Index.
Notes:
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Description based on print version record.
ISBN:
90-04-49896-6
OCLC:
1260167466
Publisher Number:
10.1163/9789004498969 DOI

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