Chinese Sympathies: Media, Missionaries, and World Literature from Marco Polo to Goethe (Signale: Modern German Letters, Cultures, and Thought)

Chinese Sympathies: Media, Missionaries, and World Literature from Marco Polo to Goethe (Signale: Modern German Letters, Cultures, and Thought) image
ISBN-10:

1501759744

ISBN-13:

9781501759741

Released: Oct 15, 2021
Format: Paperback, 420 pages
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Description:

Review\nIn this erudite, rich, and far-reaching work, Daniel Purdy decisively explains how Europe's positive image of China in the eighteenth century became one marked by profound otherness and fear. He develops a fascinating architecture of inquiry to frame and understand this transformation, intersecting the idea of sympathy with reading practices and technologies, as well as an emerging notion of world literature. -- Birgit Tautz, Bowdoin College, author of Translating the World\nFrom Marco Polo and Jesuit missionaries to Goethe's fascination with Chinese literature, this book stands out from the profusion of books on European depictions of China by focusing on media networks and the poetics of representation. A significant literary history of China in the European?particularly German?imagination, this book can also be read as a genealogy of the concept of world literature. -- Chenxi Tang, University of California, Berkeley, author of Imagining World Order\nChinese Sympathies examines how Europeans―German-speaking writers and thinkers in particular―identified with Chinese intellectual and literary traditions following the circulation of Marco Polo's Travels. This sense of affinity expanded and deepened, Daniel Leonhard Purdy shows, as generations of Jesuit missionaries, baroque encyclopedists, Enlightenment moralists, and translators established intellectual regimes that framed China as being fundamentally similar to Europe.
Analyzing key German literary texts―theological treatises, imperial histories, tragic dramas, moral philosophies, literary translations, and poetic cycles―Chinese Sympathies traces the paths from baroque-era missionary reports that accommodated Christianity with Confucianism to Goethe's concept of world literature, bridged by Enlightenment debates over cosmopolitanism and sympathy, culminating in a secular principle that allowed readers to identify meaningful similarities across culturally diverse literatures based on shared human experiences.
This book is freely available in an open access edition thanks to TOME (Toward an Open Monograph Ecosystem)―a collaboration of the Association of American Universities, the Association of University Presses, and the Association of Research Libraries―and the generous support of the Pennsylvania State University. Learn more at the TOME website, available at: openmonographs.org. The open access edition is available at Cornell Open (cornellpress.cornell.edu/cornell-open) and other repositories.


























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