Book Read Free

The Chinese Typewriter

Page 54

by Thomas Mullaney


  proponents of, 13–14, 190

  rejection of, 125, 138, 156, 171–172

  advertising, Chinese, 153–154

  A.E.G. Company, 343n37

  aesthetics of divisible type, 96–103, 154

  machinic, 151, 153

  of Oriental “essences” in Occident, 92

  politics of, 156

  traditional Chinese orthographic, 93–95, 96, 130, 132, 151, 154

  twentieth-century transformation of, 153

  agonistic methodology, 30, 31–32

  Ai Weiwei, 3

  aikoku taipisuto (patriotic typists), 222

  algorithmic reading, 76, 84, 85, 88, 91, 347n3 by Chinese researchers, 141, 361n63

  Allard, J. Frank, 185

  Allen, Joseph, 261

  alphabet, Cyrillic, 60

  alphabet, fetishization of, 67–68

  alphabet, Greek, 2, 186

  alphabet, Latin on stenotype machine, 317–318

  used as paratextual technology in Chinese, 8–9, 255–256

  used in Chinese telegraph code, 117, 118f, 120

  alphabet, Phoenician, 2, 186

  alphabetic order as analogy for character organization methods, 249

  Chinese telegraph code and, 120

  lack of in Chinese script, 3–9, 250

  in Olympic Parade of Nations, 2, 4, 338n9

  as stable, 250, 252, 253

  alphacentric technologies, 9–10, 25, 46, 60, 352n48

  alphasyllabaries (abugidas), 11

  Analytic Universal Telegraphy (Escayrac de Lauture), 106, 108–109

  Anderson, Leroy, 27–28, 29, 31

  Anglo-Chinese College, 102, 147

  Anglo-French expedition to China (1859), 106

  animation, Chinese, 170

  anti-reading. See algorithmic reading

  Apple (computer company), 241

  Arabic numerals adoption of, in Chinese, 140

  on Shu-style typewriter, 366n19

  Arabic script, and typewriter, 62–63, 344n52

  Army Typist, The (Sakurada Tsunehisa), 222

  Asahi shinbun (periodical), 222, 375n7

  ASIA (magazine), 188, 278

  “auto-telecommunication

  Baidu, 320

  baihua. See vernacularization of Chinese

  Bangkok, 50

  Baoshan Chinese Typewriting Supplementary School, 228–229

  Barr, John H., 345n54

  Beijing, 227, 228, 278, 284. See also Olympic Games

  beiyongzi. See infrequently used characters

  Bell, Alexander Graham, 55

  Berry, Mary Elizabeth, 248

  Beyerhaus, Auguste, 102, 149, 265, 325, 351n38, 351n39

  Bi Sheng, 81, 169, 325

  Bible, 87, 89, 135, 349n19, 351n38, 358n20

  Blair, Ann, 247–248

  blind typing, 179

  Bloom, Alfred, 70, 72

  Boas, Franz, 68

  Bodde, Derk, 70, 72

  bodies, human attuned to Communist rhetoric, 292, 304

  Chinese typewriting and, 134, 172, 182, 371n55

  in Chinese versus alphabetic typing, 178–180

  natural-language experimentation and, 290, 300, 304

  standardization and, 303

  technolinguistic history and, 178

  Bollywood, 29

  Boltz, William, 70

  Bombay Talkie (film), 28–29, 30

  Book from the Sky (Xu Bing), 16–18, 22

  Boulder Dam, as analogy for Chinese typewriter, 244, 245

  Boxer Indemnity Scholarship Program, 137, 138

  boycott of Japanese goods in China, 218, 219

  Boyfriend (magazine), 215

  Breteuil, 355n74

  Brook, Timothy, 225

  Brown, Alexander T., 47

  Brumbaugh, Robert, 151

  brushtalk, 209–210, 211

  Bryans, William Remington, 148, 363n78

  Bryson, Bill, 35, 40, 41, 43

  Buck, Pearl S., 272, 278

  Burgess, Anthony, 35

  bushou. See radicals

  Byrne, David, 319

  Cable and Wireless, 201, 315

  Cadmus, 186–187, 279

  Cai Yuanpei, 185, 249

  Caligraph (typewriter model), 50

  calligraphy, Chinese, 16, 96, 281, 399n66 aesthetics of, 94–95, 99

  orthographic principles of, 5, 94–95, 256

  candidacy (in input), 240, 281

  Cang Jie, 170

  carbon-paper copying, 170, 180, 220

  carriage advance mechanism, 59, 60, 63 reversed in Arabic and Hebrew typewriters, 60–61, 343n45, 344n52

  Carter, Harry, 17, 18, 19

  cartoons, mocking Chinese typewriters, 35–38, 42, 192–193

  cenemic script, 11–12, 68

  Chang, C.C., 157, 363n78

  Chang, Chung-yuan, 279

  Changsha, 142

  character cylinder (typewriter part), 166, 167, 265, 363n79 in Japanese typewriter, 205

  “character retrieval problem.” See under retrieval of Chinese characters

  characters, Chinese abundance of, 77, 88, 264–265

  in computing, 239–243

  described verbally by components, 261

  as elemental unit of script, 79–80

  encounter with Western information technologies, 9–10, 44

  fake, 16–18

  “fundamental method” of organizing, 250–253, 256–258

  as hindrance to technology, 184, 316

  as “ideographic,” 66, 320

  invention of, 170

  as irresolvable individuals, 131, 132

  “natural laws” of, 99

  not made to fit the typewriter, 156

  “puzzling” of, 75–121, 211

  as semi-phoneticized “half-breed

  simplification of, 15, 19, 20, 301

  spatial archetypes of, 262

  “spelled” from components, 80, 90, 94, 102, 104, 131, 149

  structural balance of, 75

  as ultimate Other of world scripts, 11–12, 64–65, 317

  used for transnational communication, 209–210

  Western denigration of, 38, 43–44, 65–74, 81

  See also abolition of Chinese characters; radicals

  character selector (typewriter part), 143, 197, 199

  character slugs (typewriter part), 30, 169, 226 lacking for infrequent characters, 284

  not fixed, 163, 295

  on Shu-style typewriter, 163–164, 167, 364n1

  Yu Binqi and, 219

  See also infrequently used characters

  Chartier, Roger, 178

  Chen Changgeng, 230, 231, 233

  Chen Duxiu, 12, 15, 252

  Chen Guangyao, 296, 298

  Chen Heqin, 141, 142, 361n58

  Chen Lifu, 253–258, 325, 390n23, 390n25 invention of Five-Stroke system, 254

  as “righting the wrongs of the ancients

  Chen Pengnian, 77

  Chen Songling, 175

  Chiang Kai-shek, 254, 278, 371n55

  Chicago Daily Tribune, 244, 245

  China Standard Typewriter Manufacturing Company, 226

  Chinatown, Los Angeles, 161

  Chinatown, San Francisco, 35

  China Typewriter Company, 233

  “Chinese alphabet” (Western misconception), 183–187

  Chinese-American Typing Institute, 174

  Chinese Civil War, 278

  Chinese Exclusion Act, 362n76

  Chinese Inventors Association, 220

  Chinese National Physical Education Federation, 215

  Chinese Phonetic Alphabet. See zhuyin fuhao

  Chinese Railway Institute, 165

  Chinese Students’ Monthly, 125

  Chinese Telegraph Administration

  Chinese Times, 126

  “Chinese Typewriter” (dance), 40

  Chinese Typewriter, The (film), 38–39

  chinmun. See “truth script”

  Chu Yin Tzu-mu Keyboard. S
ee typewriter models, Chinese: Remington Chinese Phonetic Typewriter

  Civil Service Examination, Chinese, 21

  Civil War, U.S., 127

  CJK (Chinese-Japanese-Korean information technology), 200, 210 in typewriter market, 209

  Clarke, Adele, 307

  cleaning services for typewriters, 225

  cliché, 291, 295

  cloud, the, 320

  Coble, Parks, 225

  “code consciousness

  codex, 178

  Cold War, 196

  colonialism, Western, 9, 12, 107

  combinatorialism, 79, 121, 159, 316 in Chinese-language printing, 89–103, 106

  criticism of in typewriting, 157–158, 264

  definition of, 80

  in MingKwai, 264–265, 266f

  in Qi Xuan typewriter, 149–154, 150f

  in telegraphy, 103–104

  See also divisible type

  Commercial Press, 142, 250, 252, 274, 296, 364n104 competition to, 212, 217, 223, 224, 229

  and formation of typewriter industry, 170–172, 175, 182

  implements lianchuanzi, 292

  interest in Zhou Houkun typewriter, 157, 159, 165

  Japanese bombing of, 212–213

  mass-produces first Chinese typewriter, 161, 164, 166–169, 168f, 169f

  presents Chinese typewriter to West, 188–190

  Commercial Press Characters in the Chinese Spoken Language (Chen Heqin), 141

  common usage, 17–18, 121, 316 approach to typewriting, 155–156

  in Chinese-language printing, 81–88, 89, 106, 128

  in Chinese telegraph code, 110

  criticism of in typewriting, 158, 264, 274

  definition of, 79

  “discovery” of by Westerners, 85

  Japanese kanji and, 204–205

  in MingKwai, 264, 267, 268

  and number of characters used in texts, 84–86

  politics of exclusion in, 87, 88, 100, 103, 198

  in Qi Xuan typewriter, 148–149

  in Sheffield typewriter, 132–134

  in Shu-style typewriter, 163

  vibrancy in early twentieth-century China, 140–142

  in Zhou Houkun typewriter, 137, 140, 143, 159, 166

  See also descriptive imperative; exclusion of characters; prescriptive imperative

  Communist Party, Chinese (CCP) alliance with Nationalists, 254

  attitude toward typing experiments, 300–301

  in Chinese Civil War, 278–279

  language reform and, 12, 142, 301

  Zhang Jiying and, 292

  Communist revolution (1949), 8, 232, 278–279 key political changes caused by, 299–300

  competitions, typing Manchuria-Wide Typing Competition, 224

  North China Military Region Typing Competition, 298

  “complete keyboard” typewriter. See double-keyboard typewriter

  Computer History Museum, 237

  computing Chinese, 9, 14, 19, 24, 238–243, 288, 315–321

  history of Western, 237–238

  Western misconceptions of Chinese, 321

  conceptual algorithms, 42–44

  Conference on Unification of Pronunciation, 185

  Confucianism, 12, 15, 202

  Confucius, 86

  Connected Language Tray Bed. See lianchuanzi

  continuity, 18, 21–23

  correspondence (of keystrokes to inscription), 239, 245, 317

  Costas, Bob, 3–4, 6, 9

  Cousin, Abel Joseph Constant, 53–54

  Creel, Herrlee Glessner, 68–69, 70

  criteria (in computing), 239, 240, 281

  C.Y. Chao Typewriting Maintenance Department, 225

  Daily Hiragana News, 202

  Daily Picayune-New Orleans, 136

  Damrong Rajanubhab, Prince, 45

  dao (of organizing Chinese characters), 252, 253, 258

  Daodejing, 89, 92

  Daoism, 15, 89, 202

  dayinben. See type-and-mimeograph editions

  daziji. See typewriter, Chinese

  daziyuan. See typists, Chinese

  decentralization of tray bed changes, 288, 290, 300, 304, 308, 311, 397n55

  deconstruction, 31–32

  De la transmission télégraphique des caractères chinois (Escayrac de Lauture), 103–104

  Denshin jigō. See kana: in Japanese telegraph code

  Densmore Typewriter Company, 46, 50

  descriptive imperative, 87, 134

  Detroit, 137

  “dialects” of Chinese, 13, 21, 40, 187, 243, 356n75 and “national language

  in popular culture, 39

  dictionaries, Chinese, 15, 77, 82–83, 95, 270 foundational character dictionaries, 142, 204

  See also Kangxi Dictionary

  Ding, Cook, 99

  directionality of script, in Hebrew and Arabic, 60

  discipline, physical and mental, 178

  divisible type, 80, 90–103, 106, 131, 351n37, 351n38 aesthetic politics of, 96–103, 154, 198

  compared to full-body type, 97–100, 98f, 101f

  number of radicals needed in, 158

  Qi Xuan’s typewriter and, 147, 149, 151

  telegraphy and, 103

  widespread adoption of, 102

  Dodge, Elbert S., 343n45

  Dong Jing’an, 143

  double-keyboard typewriter, 47–49, 48f, 342n27 disappearance of, 51, 56

  Du Dingyou, 249, 250, 252, 260–263, 270, 325, 390n29

  Du Ponceau, Peter S., 66–67

  Dyer, Samuel, 102, 325, 349n20

  East Asia Japanese-Chinese Typewriting Professional Supplementary School, 228, 229, 386n109

  Eastern Extension A&C Telegraph Company, 110

  East India Company, 84

  edicts, imperial (zhaoshu), 213

  Egyptian script, 66

  eight fundamental strokes, 5, 5f, 94–95, 256, 257f

  electronic music, 318–319

  embedded messages, 217

  embodied practice. See bodies, human

  “enciphered” transmissions (telegraphy), 112–113, 115 Chinese considered to be, 114, 355n74

  during Nationalist military campaign, 254

  engineers duty of according to Zhou Houkun, 138–139

  role in Chinese technolinguistic modernity, 10, 14

  Escayrac de Lauture, Pierre Henri Stanislas d’, 104–105, 110, 114, 325 Chinese telegraph code proposal, 103–104, 105f, 109

  and universal telegraphic language, 106, 108–109, 110, 112, 353n59

  Ethnic Classification project (minzu shibie), 283

  “evocative objects

  evolutionism in character retrieval debate, 252

  questioning of, 68–70

  in Western critiques of Chinese, 43–44, 65–67, 71, 72

  “examination Chinese

  exclusion of characters in Sheffield’s typewriter, 132, 133, 134–135

  in typewriters in general, 155–156

  in Zhou Houkun’s typewriter, 166

  “exotic type

  factories, typewriter, 59, 61, 63, 167–169, 168f, 169f

  false universalisms, 9, 10–12, 64, 317 in Olympic Games, 4

  Fan Jiling, 232, 233

  Far East Trade Monthly, 224

  feminization of clerical workforce in Japan, 205

  worldwide, 172–173, 175, 177, 274, 392n47

  Fengtian Japanese-Chinese Typing Institute, 229

  Fengtian Typing Professional School, 213

  finding rod. See character selector

  Five-Stroke (Wubi) retrieval system, 254–258, 259f, 390n25. See also Chen Lifu

  Flox, O.D., 126–128

  Foguoji (A Record of Buddhist Kingdoms), 89, 102, 351n39

  Fong Sec, 188

  fonts, Chinese, 89, 90, 92–93, 96, 102, 348n16, 351n39 radical new fonts, 153–154

  Song-style font (songti), 18

  See also divisible type; movable type

  Forbidden City, 36, 147

  f
oundational character sets, 141–142, 155, 166, 361n63

  Four Treasuries, The (Siku quanshu), 82

  France, rationality of, 90, 93

  frequency analysis of alphabetic scripts, 60

  frequency analysis of Chinese characters by Chinese researchers, 140–142, 361n58

  in computer input, 19, 240

  in corpus of Chinese texts, 84, 89

  by Gamble, 75–76

  in natural-language arrangement, 305

  by Sheffield, 132

  in Shu-style typewriter tray bed, 163

  for typesetting, 82

  Fujimura, Joan, 307

  Fukuzawa Yukichi, 204

  Fuller, Matthew, 239

  gada gada gada (sound of Chinese typewriter), 30, 31

  Gamble, William, 75–76, 134, 141, 325, 349n19 analysis of Chinese common usage, 75–76, 79, 86, 87, 89, 127, 361n58

  criticism of Chinese movable type, 81, 83, 347n4

  Gao Mengdan, 249, 250

  Gattopardo, Il (Lampedusa), 22

  Gellner, Ernest, 202

  Gestalt pattern-finding, 262, 271

  Gilbert, Paul T., 183

  Ginsberg, Allen, 71

  Girouard, Gerry, 319

  Glidden, Carlos, 46

  Goody, Jack, 69

  Google, 241, 281, 319

  Grant, John Cameron, 184–185

  “graphology” (“metalanguage”), in Chinese, 261

  Great Asia Pictorial (periodical), 176

  Greater East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere, 224

  Great Leap Forward, 79, 300

  Great Learning, The (Daxue), 89

  Great Northern Telegraph Company, 109, 201

  Great Qing Legal Code, 84–85, 89

  Greece, Western reverence for, 2

  “Greek Miracle,” 2, 69, 186

  Guangde Chinese Typewriting Supplementary School, 227, 228

  Guomindang, 195, 253 Central Executive Committee, 253, 255

 

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