Chinese southern diaspora studies_Issue 4 (for Volume 4)

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Volume

4

Number

4

Issue Date

2010

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

1834-609X

Journal Volume

Articles

PublicationOpen Access
English-language Editor’s Introduction [Chinese Southern Diaspora Studies, Volume 4, 2010]
(Centre for the Study of the Chinese Southern Diaspora, The Australian National University, 2010)
PublicationOpen Access
編者的話 [Chinese Southern Diaspora Studies, Volume 4, 2010]
(Centre for the Study of the Chinese Southern Diaspora, The Australian National University, 2010)
PublicationOpen Access
Re-Imagining "Annam": A New Analysis of Sino–Viet–Muong Linguistic Contact
(Centre for the Study of the Chinese Southern Diaspora, The Australian National University, 2010) Phan, John D.
This article examines the linguistic boundaries that separated (or united) Medieval China’s southern territories and the river plains of northern Vietnam at the end of the first millennium C.E. New evidence from Sino–Vietnamese vocabulary demonstrates the existence of a regional dialect of Middle Chinese, spoken in the Ma, Ca, and Red River plains. Preliminary analysis suggests that a “language shift” away from this “Annamese Middle Chinese” in favor of the local, non-Chinese language, was largely responsible for the highly sinicized lexicon of modern Vietnamese. This theory, which challenges the tradition of an essentially literary source for Sino–Vietnamese, may help to explain some of the sinicized features of Vietnamese phonology and syntax as well. The last section of the article presents a tentative hypothesis for the formal emergence of Vietnamese contra its closest relative, Muong. These hypotheses require further testing, and are presented here as a first look at the history of the languages of “Annam”.
PublicationOpen Access
Before "Chinese" and "Vietnamese" in the Red River Plain: The Han–Tang Period
(Centre for the Study of the Chinese Southern Diaspora, The Australian National University, 2010) Churchman, Michael
The identification of people as Chinese and Vietnamese in Vietnam, that has caused much suffering in the last half-century, has been projected back into distant pasts where it does not belong. Almost all historians of the Han–Tang period in the Red River Delta use modern ideas of “Chinese” and “Vietnamese” ethnicity to discuss this era, contrasting “Chinese” invaders with indigenous “Vietnamese”. Using textual analysis and historical linguistics, this essay argues that no Han–Tang period texts recognise these ethnic divisions, meaning these terms cannot accurately reflect social divisions of the period. Furthermore, none of the national ethnonyms Vietnamese historians claim as their own (like Việt and Lạc) referred exclusively to Red River Delta people. Where Chinese are concerned, the article explores how the equally problematic term “Chinese” became applicable to northern migrants, and when it became a useful analytical category of ethnicity in early Vietnamese experience.
PublicationOpen Access
Brush and Ship: The Southern Chinese Diaspora and Literati in Ðại Việt during the Twelfth and Thirteenth Centuries
(Centre for the Study of the Chinese Southern Diaspora, The Australian National University, 2010) Whitmore, John K.
What relationship developed between the new realm of Ðại Việt (northern Vietnam) and the growing southeast coast of China in the early second millennium C.E.? Fan Chengda's report of the 1170s on the Vietnamese spoke of a strong interaction between the two regions, of Min Chinese moving into Ðại Việt. This note looks at commercial and educational developments on the southeast coast of China and relates these developments to the emerging Trần dynasty and the increased significance of literati in Ðại Việt.

Description

Keywords

Source

Type

Book Title

Entity type

JournalIssue

Access Statement

License Rights

DOI