Jing Tsu is John M. Schiff Professor of East Asian Languages and Literatures and Comparative Literature and Chair of the Council on East Asian Studies at Yale. She specializes in Chinese literature, history, and culture from the nineteenth century to the present, and received her doctorate in Chinese studies from Harvard. A Guggenheim Fellow, she has held fellowships and distinctions from Harvard, Stanford, and Princeton institutes.
Praise for Kingdom of Characters:
“Rigorous and engaging. . . . Languages, as this book makes clear,
convey worlds.” —New York Times
“A lively and insightful history of the intersection of China’s
information technology systems and its language revolution. The
book is a richly documented, riveting, and scholarly rigorous
transnational account of how Chinese evolved from a hard-to-learn
script entrenched in the beleaguered Middle Kingdom in the 19th
century to a global language in the 21st
century.” —Science
“A fascinating book” —The Economist
“A lively chronicle of the inventors who gave their all to make the
Chinese script compatible with modern life.” —The Guardian
“Enchanting... [Tsu's] love for the enigma and beauty of Chinese
shines through in this delightful mix of history and linguistics...
A pleasure to read.” —The Sunday Times (London)
“Erudite and beautifully written.” —Rana Mitter, The Times Literary
Supplement (London)
“A well-told story about those who created modern China not through
the barrel of a gun or a little red book but through dictionaries,
libraries and printing presses.” —The Spectator (UK)
“Stimulating.” —Nature
“Interesting and very readable.” —Peter Gordon, Asian Review of
Books
“Pioneering” —Physics World
“[A]n immersive history of the effort to transform the written
Chinese language’s vast and complex set of characters into a modern
communication technology . . . Tsu sheds light on the intriguing
interplay between Chinese language and politics. Sinophiles and
language buffs will be fascinated.” —Publisher's Weekly
“Tsu’s humanistic, big-picture sensibility makes an otherwise
obscure thread in the history of information technology vivid and
compelling.” —Booklist
“An engaging, relevant work that delves into the linguistic past in
order to predict China’s future success in the world.” —Kirkus
(starred review)
“In Kingdom of Characters, Jing Tsu introduces us to a cast of
unforgettable figures. She tells an essential story of modern
China: a country at once transformed and yet deeply traditional.”
—Peter Hessler, author of Oracle Bones and River Town
“Jing Tsu wears her erudition lightly and gives us a fascinating
and moving story. It shows the passionate struggle of
generations of pioneers. It's a story of desperate strife,
unflagging dedication, and ultimately, triumph.” —Ha Jin, author of
Waiting and War Trash
“A deeply engaging and revealing narrative of the Chinese language
in modern times. Meticulously researched and beautifully written.”
—David Wang, Edward C. Henderson Professor of Chinese and
Comparative Literature, Harvard University
“Seldom have I read a book about modern China so informative,
revelatory and enjoyable.” —Simon Winchester, author of The
Professor and the Madman and The Man Who Loved China
“An absolute joy to read. This stunning, meticulously researched
book is the detective story of Chinese characters. Jing Tsu has
seamlessly fused the craft of the linguistic historian with the
artistry of the storyteller—including cliff-hangers.” —David
Crystal, author of How Language Works and The Stories of English
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