Qian Zhongshu

Qian Zhongshu
Qian Zhongshu
Names
Simplified Chinese: 钱锺书
Traditional Chinese: 錢鍾書
Pinyin: Qián Zhōngshū
Wade-Giles: Ch'ien Chung-shu
Zi: Zheliang (哲良)
  Mocun (默存)
Hao: Huaiju (槐聚)
Qian Zhongshu
Born 21 November 1910(1910-11-21)
China Qing Dynasty Flag 1889.svg Wuxi, Jiangsu, Qing Empire
Died 19 December 1998(1998-12-19) (aged 88)
China Beijing, People's Republic of China
Alma mater Tsinghua University
University of Oxford
Influenced by Feng Youlan, Ch'ien Mu
Spouse Yang Jiang
Children Qian Yuan 錢瑗
Parents Qian Jibo 錢基博

Qian Zhongshu (November 21, 1910 – December 19, 1998) was a Chinese literary scholar and writer, known for his wit and erudition.

He is best known for his satiric novel Fortress Besieged (圍城,围城). His works of non-fiction are characterised by their large amount of quotations in both Chinese and Western languages (including English, French, German, Italian, Spanish, and Latin).[1] He also played an important role in digitizing the Chinese classics late in his life.[2]

Contents

Life

Most of what is known about Qian's early life relies on an essay written by his wife Yang Jiang.[3] Born in Wuxi, Qian Zhongshu was the son of Qian Jibo (錢基博,钱基博), a conservative Confucian scholar. By family tradition, Qian Zhongzhu grew up under the care of his eldest uncle, who did not have a son. Qian was initially named Yangxian (仰先 "respect the ancients"), with the courtesy name Zheliang (哲良 "sagacious and upright"). However, when he was one year old, according to a tradition practised in many parts of China, he was given a few objects laid out in front of him for his "grabbing". He grabbed a book. His uncle then renamed him Zhongshu, literally "being fond of books", and Yangxian became his intimate name. Qian was a talkative child. His father later changed his courtesy name to Mocun (默存), literally "to keep silent", in the hope that he would talk less.

Both Qian's name and courtesy name predicted his future life. While he remained talkative when talking about literature with friends, he kept silent most time on politics and social activities. Qian was indeed very fond of books. When he was young, his uncle often brought him along to tea houses during the day. There Qian was left alone to read storybooks on folklore and historical events, which he would repeat to his cousins upon returning home.

When Qian was 10, his uncle died. He continued living with his widowed aunt, even though their living conditions worsened drastically as her family's fortunes dwindled. Under the severe teaching of his father, Qian mastered classical Chinese. At the age of 14, Qian left home to attend an English-speaking missionary school in Suzhou, where he manifested his talent in language.

Despite failing in mathematics, Qian was accepted into the Department of Foreign Languages of Tsinghua University in 1929 because of his excellent performance in Chinese and English languages. At Tsinghua, Qian earned the admiration of many prominent scholars,[citation needed] but rarely socialized and was considered arrogant by his peers; one of his few friends was the budding Sinologist and comparatist Achilles Fang.[4] Qian also frequently cut classes, though he more than made up for this in Tsinghua's large library, which he boasted of having "read through."[4] It was probably in his college days that Qian began his lifelong habit of collecting quotations and taking reading notes. At Tsinghua, Qian met his wife, Yang Jiang, who was to become a successful playwright and translator; they married in 1935. For the biographical facts of Qian's following years, the two memoirs by his wife can be consulted.[5]

In that same year, Qian received government sponsorship to further his studies abroad. Together with his wife, Qian headed for the University of Oxford in Britain. After spending two years at Exeter College, Oxford, he received a Baccalaureus Litterarum (Bachelor of Literature).[6] Shortly after his daughter Qian Yuan (錢瑗,钱瑗) was born, he studied for one more year in the University of Paris in France, before returning to China in 1938, in which year he was, as an exception, appointed a professor at Tsinghua University at the age of 28.

Owing to the unstable situation during the Second Sino-Japanese War, Qian did not hold any long-term jobs until the People's Republic of China was founded in 1949. However, he wrote extensively during the decade.

The old gate of Tsinghua University, where Qian Zhongshu studied and taught

In 1949, Qian was ranked on the list of National First-class Professors(國家一級教授) and commenced his academic work in his Alma Mater. Four years later, an administrative adjustment saw Tsinghua changed into a science and technology-based institution, with its Arts departments merged into Peking University (PKU). Qian was relieved of teaching duties and worked entirely in the Institute of Literary Studies (文學研究所,文学研究所) under PKU. He also worked in an agency in charge of the translation of Mao Zedong's works for a time.

During the Cultural Revolution, like many other prominent intellectuals of the time, Qian suffered persecution. Appointed to be a janitor, he was robbed of his favorite pastime, reading. Having no access to books, he had to read his reading notes. He began to form the plan to write Guan Zhui Bian (管錐編,管锥编) during this period. Qian and his wife and daughter survived the hardships of Cultural Revolution, but his son-in-law, a history teacher, was driven to suicide.

After the Cultural Revolution, Qian returned to research. From 1978 to 1980, he visited several universities in Italy, the United States and Japan, impressing his audience with his wit and erudition. In 1982, he was instated as the deputy director of the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences. He then began working on Guan Zhui Bian, which occupied the next decade of his life.

While Guan Zhui Bian established his fame in the academic field, his novel Fortress Besieged introduced him to the public. Fortress Besieged was reprinted in 1980, and became a best-seller. Many illegal reproductions and "continuations" followed. Qian's fame rose to its height when the novel was adapted into a TV serial in 1990.

Qian returned to research, but escaped from social activities. Most of his late life was confined to his reading room. He consciously kept a distance from the mass media and political figures. Readers kept visiting the secluded scholar, and the anecdote goes that Qian asked an elderly British lady, who loved the novel and phoned the author, "Is it necessary for one to know the hen if one loves the eggs it lays?"

Qian entered a hospital in 1994, and never came out. His daughter also became ill soon after, and died of cancer in 1997. On December 19, 1998, he died in Beijing. The Xinhua News Agency, the official press agency of the PRC government, labelled him "an immortal".

Works

Qian dwelled in Shanghai from 1941 to 1945, which was then under Japanese occupation. Many of his works were written or published during this chaotic period of time. A collection of short essays, Marginalias of Life (寫在人生邊上,写在人生边上) was published in 1941. Men, Beasts and Ghosts (人‧獸‧鬼), a collection of short stories, mostly satiric, was published in 1946. His most celebrated work Fortress Besieged appeared in 1947. On the Art of Poetry (談藝錄,谈艺录), written in classical Chinese, was published in 1948.

Besides rendering Mao Zedong's selected works into English, Qian was appointed to produce an anthology of poetry of the Song Dynasty when he was working in the Institute of Literary Studies. The Selected and Annotated Song Dynasty Poetry (宋詩選注,宋诗选注) was published in 1958. Despite Qian's quoting the Chairman, and his selecting a considerable number of poems that reflect class struggle, the work was criticized for not being Marxist enough. The work was praised highly by the overseas critics, though, especially for its introduction and footnotes. In a new preface for the anthology written in 1988, Qian said that the work was an embarrassing compromise between his personal taste and the then prevailing academic atmosphere.

Seven Pieces Patched Together (七綴集), a collection of seven pieces of literary criticism written (and revised) over years in vernacular Chinese, was published in 1984. This collection includes the famous essay "Lin Shu's Translation" (林紓的翻譯,林纾的翻译).

Qian's magnum opus is the five-volume Guan Zhui Bian, literally the Pipe-Awl Collection, translated into English as Limited Views. Begun in the 1980s and published in its current form in the mid-1990s, it is an extensive collection of notes and short essays on poetics, semiotics, literary history and related topics written in classical Chinese.

Qian's command of the cultural traditions of classical and modern Chinese, ancient Greek (in translations), Latin, English, German, French, Italian, and Spanish allowed him to construct a towering structure of polyglot and cross-cultural allusions. He took as the basis of this work a range of Chinese classical texts, including I-Ching, Classic of Poetry, Chuci, Zuozhuan, Shiji, Tao Te Ching, Liezi, Jiaoshi Yilin, Taiping Guangji and the Complete Prose of the Pre-Tang Dynasties (全上古三代秦漢三國六朝文,全上古三代秦汉三国六朝文).

Familiar with the whole Western history of ideas, Qian shed new lights on the Chinese classical texts by comparing them with Western works, showing their likeness, or more often their apparent likeness and essential differences.

It is a monumental work of modern scholarship that evinces the author's great learning and his effort to bring the ancient and the modern, Chinese and Western, into mutual illumination."[7]

Qian Zhongshu was one of the Chinese authors best known to the Western world. Fortress Besieged has been translated into English, French, German, Russian, Japanese and Spanish.

Besides being one of the few acknowledged masters of written vernacular Chinese in the 20th century,[8] Qian was also one of the last authors to produce substantial works in classical Chinese. Some regard his choice of writing Guan Zhui Bian in classical Chinese as a challenge to the assertion that classical Chinese is incompatible with modern and Western ideas, an assertion often heard during the May Fourth Movement.[9]

Posthumous publications

A 13-volume edition of Works of Qian Zhongshu (錢鍾書集,钱锺书集) was published in 2001 by the Joint Publishing, a hard-covered deluxe edition, in contrast to all of Qian's works published during his lifetime which are cheap paperbacks. The publisher claimed that the edition had been proofread by many experts.[10] One of the most valuable parts of the edition, titled Marginalias on the Marginalias of Life (寫在人生邊上的邊上), is a collection of Qian's writings previously scattered in periodicals, magazines and other books. The writings collected there are, however, arranged without any visible order.

Other posthumous publications of Qian's works have drawn harsh criticism. The 10-volume Supplements to and Revisions of Songshi Jishi (宋詩紀事補正), published in 2003, was condemned as a shoddy publication. The editor and the publisher have been criticized for neglecting such obvious printing mistakes.[11] A facsimile of Qian's holograph (known as 宋詩紀事補訂(手稿影印本) in Chinese) has been published in 2005, by another publisher. The facsimiles of parts of Qian's notebooks appeared in 2004, and have similarly drawn criticism on account of blatant inadvertency.[12] In 2005, a collection of Qian's English works was published. Again, it was lashed for its editorial incompetence.[13]

See also

  • List of Chinese authors

Notes

  1. ^ C.f. (Chinese) Indices to Guan Zhui Bian and Tanyi Lu (管錐編談藝錄索引,管锥编谈艺录索引), compiled by Lu Wenhu, Beijing: Zhonghua Book Company, 1990.
  2. ^ (Chinese) 文化傳信集團電子漢文史資料庫建設透視, 劉聖清、李士燕, 人民網.
  3. ^ (Chinese) "On Qian Zhongshu and the Fortress Besieged" (記錢鍾書與《圍城》,记钱锺书与《围城》), 1985, collected in Yang Jiang's Selected Prose (杨绛散文), Hangzhou: Zhejiang Literary Press, 1994.
  4. ^ a b Kelly, Jeanne and Nathan K. Mao. "Afterword." Fortress Besieged. By Qian Zhongshu. Tr. Kelly and Mao. New York: New Directions Publishing, 2004.
  5. ^ Yang Jiang, tr. Howard Goldblatt, Six Chapters from My Life "Downunder", Seattle: University of Washington Press; Hong Kong: Chinese University Press, 1984; (Chinese) Yang Jiang, We Three (我們仨), Hong Kong: Oxford University Press, 2003.
  6. ^ His thesis is called "China in the English Literature of the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Century", collected in Adrian Hsia (ed.), The Vision of China in the English Literature of the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries, Hong Kong: Chinese University Press, 1998.
  7. ^ Zhang Longxi. "The 'Tao' and the 'Logos': Notes on Derrida's Critique of Logocentrism." Critical Inquiry. Vol. 11, No. 3. (Mar., 1985), pp. 385-398.
  8. ^ See, for example, the evaluation in Hsia Chih-tsing's A History of Modern Chinese Fiction, Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1999, pp. 432-60.
  9. ^ (Chinese) 《管錐編》為什么用文言?, 孫玉祥, 《太原日報》.
  10. ^ (Chinese) 钱锺书作品全集明年多家推出, 赵武平, 《中华读书报》.
  11. ^ (Chinese) 对《宋诗纪事补正》的几点意见, 陈福康, 《文汇报》, 2003年6月15日.
  12. ^ (Chinese) 《钱钟书手稿集》的编辑错误, 高为, 《中华读书报》.
  13. ^ (Chinese) 《钱锺书英文文集》的编辑错误, 范旭仑, 光明网.

Further reading

Innumerable biographies and memoirs in Chinese have been published since Qian's death.

An introduction to Qian's style of thinking can be found in the English (selected) translation of Guan Zhui Bian:

  • Qian Zhongshu, tran. Ronald Egan (1998). Limited Views: Essays on Ideas and Letters (Harvard-Yenching Institute Monograph Series). Harvard University Asia Center. ISBN 0-674-53411-5. 

Five of Qian's essays on poetry have been translated into French:

  • Qian Zhongshu, trad. Nicolas Chapuis (1987). Cinq Essais de Poetique. Christian Bourgois Editeur. ISBN 2267004852. 

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