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What the Study of China Can Do for Social Science

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 March 2011

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Extract

In recent years the cry has gone up: Sinology is dead; long live Chinese studies! And in this apothegm, by contrast with its prototype, a fundamental change is implied. Whereas old-time Sinology was given shape by its tools, so that Sinological skills defined the field and became an end in themselves, Chinese studies is shaped by its subject matter and Sinological skills are but means to analytic ends. Whereas traditional Sinology fostered uncritical immersion in a single civilization, modern Chinese studies brings at least that degree of impartial detachment which the comparative method implies. Whereas Sinology focused on China's “great tradition” and strove to capture the very ethos of the literati whose works it studied, Chinese studies today attempts to encompass the entire society and cultural product of China, to study its regional “little traditions” along with the “great,” and to empathize for heuristic purposes with nonélite social groups as well as with the literati. Sinology, a discipline unto itself, is being replaced by Chinese studies, a multidisciplinary endeavor with specific research objectives. As Professor Wright has suggested, what is text for the Sinologist becomes, for the disciplinary student of China, evidence.

Type
Symposium on Chinese Studies and the Disciplines
Copyright
Copyright © Association for Asian Studies, Inc. 1964

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References

1 Goody, Jack and Watts, Ian, “The Consequences of Literacy,” Comparative Studies in Society and History, V (04 1963), 304345.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

2 Chang, Sen-dou, “The Historical Trend of Chinese Urbanization,” Annals of the Association of American Geographers, LIII (06 1963), 109.CrossRefGoogle Scholar