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The Victorian Translation Of China
Norman J. Girardot

The Philip E. Lilienthal Asian studies imprint

The Victorian Translation Of China

James Legge's Oriental Pilgrimage

University of California Press (May 20, 2002)
0520215524
| Hardcover
861 pages | 165 x 234 mm | English
$ 75.00 | Value: $ 75.00
Dewey 266/.02342051/092
LC Classification BV3427.L42G57 2002
LC Control No. 2001027444

Subject

  • History

Plot

In this magisterial study, Norman J. Girardot focuses on James Legge (1815-1897), one of the most important nineteenth-century figures in the cultural exchange between China and the West. A translator-transformer of Chinese texts, Legge was a pioneering cross-cultural pilgrim within missionary circles in China and within the academic world of Oxford University. By tracing Legge's career and his close association with Max Müller (1823-1900), Girardot elegantly brings a biographically embodied approach to the intellectual history of two important aspects of the emergent "human sciences" at the end of the nineteenth century: sinology and comparative religions.
Girardot weaves a captivating narrative that illuminates the era in which Legge lived as well as the surroundings in which he worked. His encyclopedic knowledge of pertinent figures, documents, peculiar ideologies, and even the personal quirks of principal and minor players brings the world of imperial China and Victorian England very much to life. At the same time, Girardot gets at the roots of much of the twentieth-century discourse about the strange religious or nonreligious otherness of China.

Details

Original Publication Date 2002

Personal

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Index 178
Added Date Oct 01, 2015 06:37:15
Modified Date Apr 14, 2019 16:43:09

Value

Retail Price $ 75.00
Value $ 75.00

Notes

Includes bibliographical references and index