
Dreaming in Chinese
Description
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Deborah Fallows has spent much of her life learning languages and traveling around the world. But nothing prepared her for the surprises of learning Mandarin, China's most common language, or the intensity of living in Shanghai and Beijing. Over time, she realized that her struggles and triumphs in studying the language of her adopted home provided small clues to deciphering the behavior and habits of its people,and its culture's conundrums. As her skill with Mandarin increased, bits of the language-a word, a phrase, an oddity of grammar-became windows into understanding romance, humor, protocol, relationships, and the overflowing humanity of modern China.
Fallows learned, for example, that the abrupt, blunt way of speaking that Chinese people sometimes use isn't rudeness, but is, in fact, a way to acknowledge and honor the closeness between two friends. She learned that English speakers' trouble with hearing or saying tones-the variations in inflection that can change a word's meaning-is matched by Chinese speakers' inability not to hear tones, or to even take a guess at understanding what might have been meant when foreigners misuse them.
In sharing what she discovered about Mandarin, and how those discoveries helped her understand a culture that had at first seemed impenetrable, Deborah Fallows's Dreaming in Chinese opens up China to Westerners more completely, perhaps, than it has ever been before.
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Content
- Cover
- Epigraph
- Title Page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Introduction
- 1. The grammar of romance
- 2. When rude is polite
- 3. Language play as a national sport
- 4. Why the Chinese hear tones, and we don't
- 5. China's Ordinary Joe
- 6. A brief introduction to Chinese names
- 7. Finding your way in China-the semantics of time and place
- 8. Disappearing pronouns and the sense of self
- 9. Think like the Chinese think
- 10. A billion people
- countless dialects
- 11. The essence of being Chinese
- 12. Rules to follow and rules to break
- 13. Out of calamity, tenderness
- 14. A little goes a long way
- Pronunciation guide
- Acknowledgements
- A Note on the Author
- eCopyright
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