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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › SinophoneSinophone - Wikipedia

    Sinophone, which means "Chinese-speaking", typically refers to an individual who speaks at least one variety of Chinese (that is, one of the Sinitic languages).Academic writers often use the term Sinophone in two definitions: either specifically "Chinese-speaking populations where it is a minority language, excluding Mainland China, Hong Kong, Macau, and Taiwan" or generally "Chinese-speaking ...

    • Han language circle
    • 漢語圈
    • 汉语圈
  2. and aurality, script and sound. In an essay that draws on her book, Sound and Script in Chinese Diaspora, Jing Tsu proposes that a historical understanding of the Chinese language and its nationalization must begin by taking the ‘phone’ in Sinophone seriously (2010a, p. 94), a call that I take up in this chapter.

    • Song Hwee Lim
    • 2014
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  4. categories, and the Sinophone does so by turning our attention toward another unit of coherence around language and text, sound, and script. 8 In this light, how can historians and other critics come to terms with the heuristic value of (or the lack thereof) using the Sinophone as a historio - graphic lens to think about China’s global past?

  5. Strictly speaking, “sinophone” refers to the sound or voicing of Sinitic, or Chinese, languages. Its implied diversity is what the recent field of Sinophone Studies takes cue from to study cultural forms like literature and cinema for speech acts implying difference, without necessarily invoking speech or spoken language as its unit of analysis.

  6. Extract. The spectacular rise of China as a superpower perhaps only now compels us to recalibrate existing discourses of empire and postcoloniality, but China has been an empire in the modern sense since the mid–eighteenth century, when it conquered vast lands north and west of “China proper.”. This history has been largely hidden from ...

    • Shu-mei Shih
    • 2011
  7. Mar 1, 2019 · Shih, Shu-mei (2007), Visuality and Identity: Sinophone Articulations across the Pacific, University of California Press. Tsu, Jing (2010), Sound and Script in Chinese Diaspora, Harvard University Press. Tsu, Jing and David Der-wei Wang, eds. (2010), Global Chinese Literature: Critical Essays, Brill. Wikipedia article on "Sinophone".

  8. Sinophone minor-. pean dominance, whereas Asia, for which ity literature in China is situated at the inter-. "the sea is without significance," was limited sections between ethnicities and languages. by its land-locked status ( Lectures 196). The Mongols, Manchu, Tibetans, and many other.

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