PART 150
Today (October 19) at New
York University Thomas S. Mullaney will be giving one of his talks on Chinese
typewriters.
Tom Mullaney, a graduate of Columbia, is
assistant professor of Modern Chinese History at Stanford University.
He working on a global history of China’s 19th
and 20th century development of a character-based information infrastructure,
examining everything from the development of Chinese telegraph codes,
typewriting and character retrieval systems to shorthand, Braille and modern
computing
Among conference
and invited papers he has, or will, deliver are The Semi-Colonial
Semi-Colon: The Discourse and Practice of Punctuation and Symbolic
Notation in Republican China (Princeton on a date yet to be confirmed), Incompatible
with Modernity: The Chinese Typewriter in the Western Imagination (American
Historical Association annual meeting this year), Splitting the Chinese Atom:
Lin Yutang, the MingKwai Typewriter, and the Crisis of Information in 20th
Century China (City University of Hong Kong last December).
Tom Mullaney’s
blog can be seen here.
See him
discuss his Chinese typewriter studies here:
2 comments:
THANKS
Lin Yutang is a fantastic writer. I'd forgotten he'd invented the Mingkwai typewriter. That's really startling that it can type 90,000 characters. For example, my very large 'Mathews' Chinese-English Dictionary' contains 7773 characters and there's nothing I've looked up that I haven't found yet, so Lin is really catering there for some quite obscure characters.
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