Difference between revisions of "History of Sinology"

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<span style="font-size: 1.2em;">From Jesuit Missionaries to Digital Humanities</span>
 
<span style="font-size: 1.2em;">From Jesuit Missionaries to Digital Humanities</span>
  
<span style="font-size: 1.1em;">'''Martin Woesler'''</span>
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<span style="font-size: 1.1em;">Martin Woesler (Ed.)</span>
  
Hunan Normal University
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Hunan Normal University / Witten/Herdecke University
  
European University Press &middot; First Edition 2026.1
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European University Press &middot; First Edition 2026.1 &middot; ~1,000 pages
  
 
ISBN 978-3-86515-447-7 (EUP) / 978-1-68202-595-6 (APUSA)
 
ISBN 978-3-86515-447-7 (EUP) / 978-1-68202-595-6 (APUSA)
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<span style="font-size: 0.95em;">'''Contributing authors:''' Hussain Aryan (Afghanistan), Etienne Bankuwiha (Burundi), Sara Cvetanovska (Macedonia), Giray Fidan (Turkey), Maurice Gountin (Benin), Michael Kn&uuml;ppel (Germany), Luo Huiling (Spain), Jorge Malena (Argentina), Ghulam Mustafa (Pakistan), Darya Nechyparik (Russia), A. D. Pavlova (Russia), Tentang Sejarah (Indonesia), Martin Woesler (Germany)</span>
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<span style="font-size: 0.9em;">''Sinologists interested in contributing to the next edition are welcome to join &mdash; simply [[Special:CreateAccount|register as a co-author]] and start editing.''</span>
 
</div>
 
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<span style="font-size: 1.1em; font-weight: bold;">About This Project</span>
 
<span style="font-size: 1.1em; font-weight: bold;">About This Project</span>
  
This is a collaborative scholarly book project hosted on UVU Wiki. Registered authors and editors can contribute to individual chapters. See [[Books]] for more information about the book platform.
+
This is a collaborative scholarly book project hosted on the China Studies Wiki. Registered authors and editors can contribute to individual chapters. See [[Books]] for more information about the book platform.
  
 
'''Status:''' 1st edition published 2026.1, 2nd edition in preparation
 
'''Status:''' 1st edition published 2026.1, 2nd edition in preparation

Revision as of 13:00, 4 April 2026

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This is a collaborative scholarly publication. Researchers, scholars, and students of sinology are invited to contribute: correct errors, add references, expand chapters, or translate into new languages. Your contributions will be credited.

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All edits are tracked in the page history and reviewed by the editorial team.


History of Sinology

From Jesuit Missionaries to Digital Humanities

Martin Woesler (Ed.)

Hunan Normal University / Witten/Herdecke University

European University Press · First Edition 2026.1 · ~1,000 pages

ISBN 978-3-86515-447-7 (EUP) / 978-1-68202-595-6 (APUSA)

Contributing authors: Hussain Aryan (Afghanistan), Etienne Bankuwiha (Burundi), Sara Cvetanovska (Macedonia), Giray Fidan (Turkey), Maurice Gountin (Benin), Michael Knüppel (Germany), Luo Huiling (Spain), Jorge Malena (Argentina), Ghulam Mustafa (Pakistan), Darya Nechyparik (Russia), A. D. Pavlova (Russia), Tentang Sejarah (Indonesia), Martin Woesler (Germany)

Sinologists interested in contributing to the next edition are welcome to join — simply register as a co-author and start editing.

Available in multiple languages / Mehrsprachig verfügbar / 多语言版本:

Translation status: View translation status report

Table of Contents


PART I: ORIGINS AND PRECURSORS

Chapter 1: Early Encounters — Travelers, Traders, and the First Reports on China
Chapter 2: The Jesuit Enterprise — From Missionary Linguistics to Proto-Sinology (1582–1773)

PART II: THE ESTABLISHMENT OF SINOLOGY AS AN ACADEMIC DISCIPLINE

Chapter 4: The Founding of Academic Sinology (1814–1900)
Chapter 5: The Maturation of Sinology (1900–1945)
Chapter 6: Cold War Sinology — Divided Fields, Competing Paradigms (1945–1990)

PART III: SINOLOGY BY COUNTRY AND REGION

Chapter 7: Germany — From Leibniz to Contemporary Chinawissenschaften
Chapter 8: France — The Collège de France Tradition and the Golden Age of Philological Sinology
Chapter 9: Great Britain — Diplomats, Missionaries, and the Translator-Scholar Tradition
Chapter 10: The Netherlands — From the VOC to Leiden’s Global Reach
Chapter 11: Portugal and Spain — The Iberian Roots of European Sinology
Chapter 12: Italy — From Matteo Ricci to Contemporary Italian Sinology
Chapter 14: Scandinavia — Bernhard Karlgren and the Swedish School
Chapter 15: Eastern Europe — Sinology in Poland, Czech Republic, Romania, Macedonia, and Belarus
Chapter 16: Russia — From the Ecclesiastical Mission to Contemporary Chinese Studies
Chapter 17: United States — From Friedrich Hirth to the Area Studies Model
Chapter 18: Australia and New Zealand — Sinology in the Antipodes
Chapter 19: East Asia — Sinology in Japan, Korea, and Vietnam
Chapter 20: Turkey, Afghanistan, Pakistan, and Indonesia — Sinology on the Silk Road and Beyond
Chapter 21: Africa and Latin America — Emerging Chinese Studies

PART IV: THEMATIC PERSPECTIVES

Chapter 22: Translation as Sinological Method
Chapter 23: Chinese Philosophy in Western Sinology
Chapter 24: Chinese Literary Studies in the West

PART V: CONTEMPORARY DEVELOPMENTS AND FUTURE DIRECTIONS

Chapter 29: “Sinology” vs. “Chinese Studies” — The Disciplinary Identity Debate
Chapter 30: Digital Humanities and the Future of Sinological Research
Chapter 31: Conclusion — Where Does Sinology Go From Here?

About This Project

This is a collaborative scholarly book project hosted on the China Studies Wiki. Registered authors and editors can contribute to individual chapters. See Books for more information about the book platform.

Status: 1st edition published 2026.1, 2nd edition in preparation