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| Classical Chinese: A Basic Reader in Three Volumes | 
| Authors: Naiying Yuan, Hai-tao Tang, James Geiss Publisher: Princeton University Press Category: Book
List Price: $45.00 Buy New: $40.50 You Save: $4.50 (10%)
New (9) from $40.50
Avg. Customer Rating: 5 reviews Sales Rank: 360753
Media: Paperback Number Of Items: 3 Pages: 832 Shipping Weight (lbs): 4.8 Dimensions (in): 10.8 x 8.2 x 2.5
ISBN: 0691118310 Dewey Decimal Number: 495.10901 EAN: 9780691118314 ASIN: 0691118310
Publication Date: July 12, 2004 Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
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Product Description
Classical Chinese: A Basic Reader is the most comprehensive and authoritative textbook on the language, literature, philosophy, history, and religion of premodern China. Rigorously and extensively field-tested and fine-tuned for years in classroom settings by three members of the Chinese Linguistics Project at Princeton University, it sets a new standard for the field. Volume 1 contains 40 selections from texts written between the fifth century B.C. and the first century A.D., during which the classical Chinese language was fully developed and standardized. These passages, which express key themes in Chinese humor, wit, wisdom, moral conviction, and political ideals, are arranged in the order of complexity of the grammatical patterns they exemplify. Uniquely, each text is translated into both modern Chinese and English. Volume 2 contains a detailed glossary of unfamiliar terms and names found in Volume 1, and Volume 3 features detailed grammatical analyses, in which every sentence in the main texts is fully diagrammed to show the grammatical relations between their various parts. Four supplementary volumes--an introduction to grammar, readings in poetry and prose, selected historical texts, and selected philosophical texts--will also be available for use in conjunction with the main, three-volume set. There are corresponding exercises for all the reading texts in the Basic Reader and in the supplementary volumes to review and reinforce classroom learning. With Classical Chinese: A Basic Reader, Naiying Yuan, Haitao Tang, and James Geiss provide the definitive new resource for students and instructors of classical Chinese language or culture, one whose impact will be lasting.
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| Customer Reviews:
Please Read Before Purchase September 19, 2007 9 out of 9 found this review helpful
I don't know how many of these people that wrote their reviews for this book actually bought the book at amazon. I bought the book, and found out it's only the TEXT! If you want the real "A Basic Reader in THREE VOLUMES" I suggest you buy it from a third party dealer. I got it from BCD Books at amazon because they actually sell the 3 volumes as one unit. If you want to learn classical chinese, this is what you'll need.
"Classical Chinese: A Basic Reader Text" <- Volume 1 "Classical Chinese: A Basic Reader Glossaries" <- Volume 2 "Classical Chinese: A Basic Reader Analyses" <- Volume 3
The book advertised here on amazon as "Classical Chinese: A Basic Reader in Three Volumes" is ONLY VOLUME ONE, the Text. I don't know why the heck they advertised it the way they did, it is very misleading. Please be warned, don't have simply the text sent to your house and regret x_x like I did and had to buy it again.
Excellent for self-guided study October 2, 2006 4 out of 4 found this review helpful
This set of volumes is the best I have found for someone who wants to study Classical Chinese on his own. The text analysis is very thorough, and offers a great way of becoming familiar with real Chinese sentence structure. There are no introductory information on how to look up characters, but any character book for beginners will help you become familiar with counting strokes and recognizing radicals in a very short time - this difficulty should not be over-estimated. Actually, the texts are transliterated into PinYin 100%, so you can look up characters by sound even if you do not know how to handle radicals and strokes. Since this textbook is detailed, it takes time to work through it; on the other hand, if you devote some time to it every day, you will make progress and you do not risk finding yourself outpaced by the book. The only drawback is the three-volume format - you need to have a large desk so you can keep all three volumes (and maybe a notebook and a dictionary) open in front of you! Actually, it would be really good if the quality of the Chinese fonts could be improved too - they are not very crisp, which makes it hard to count strokes sometimes. There is a companion volume with poetry samples, too. This is again very well done. It contains very little in the way of grammar explanations, but texts and vocabulary are presented in one volume (so this is what I bring with me when I am travelling :-) ).
Good introduction, not advanced enough February 9, 2006 5 out of 5 found this review helpful
I used this book in preparation to jump into a more advanced classical Chinese class, and though the explanations it had were very useful (and I must add I am near-fluent in modern Mandarin, so it appealed in that way to me because it helped me understand things in both languages, giving me a backup in case one explanation wasn't thurough enough), I felt that even though I had gone through about 30 chapters, when I went into the other class I felt I had not really been given a challenging set of works to learn from. If you are looking for a simple approach, I would reccomend this book, if you are looking for an ambitious approach, I might look elsewhere.
Introduction to Wenyan July 31, 2005 9 out of 9 found this review helpful
I've never seen such a detailed analysis of senteces and structures in any book teaching grammar, which makes it very suitable for a self-learner of this mesmerizing language like myself. Inluded in the glossaries are both english and modern chinese translations, which makes it useful for comparing the classic and modern written language. But there are a couple of problems with this book, including the numerous typos in english, and worse, in the pinyin transcriptions; the bad printing, especially the fonts. The map over ancient map of China is incomprehensible. The glossaries are not totally complete (though if you have a basic understanding of modern chinese this will be no problem); a worse problem is that there's no index to the characters.
All in all, despite its flaws, I would warmly recommend this series.
Great book, bad proofreading December 14, 2004 18 out of 18 found this review helpful
I'm a self-taught student of Classical Chinese (yes, I know that isn't really possible, but I'm doing it anyway <g>), so this book is a very important resource. What I would hope to see in the second edition is:
1. An index listing of all glossary items in the back of the glossaries volume organized by four-corner lookup order (sijiao) and with Pinyin and Radical indexes.
2. Answers to selected exercises for self-taught students like myself.
3. Less reliance on Modern Chinese. I know it's traditional to study Mandarin first, then move on to Classical, but some oddballs like me are interested in the Classics only, and not modern speech and literature.
4. Princeton is a big university, hire a proofreader. The text is full of glaring typos in English. I'm not qualified to find typos in the Chinese, but even there I've found editing errors.
Even with all these minor flaws, this is an important and valuable book, which is why I gave it five stars, warts and all.
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