The Chinese Typewriter

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The Chinese Typewriter Page 56

by Thomas Mullaney


  Orality and Literacy (Ong), 40

  organizational methods for characters. See retrieval of Chinese characters

  Orientalism, 44, 91–92

  Oriental Library (Shanghai), 260

  Origin and Progress of the Art of Writing, The (Humphrey), 67

  Otani Typewriter Company, 205

  Palace of Fine Arts, San Francisco, 147

  Panama-Pacific International Exposition (1915), 56, 147, 204

  Parade of Nations, Olympic, 2–9, 11, 337n6, 338n9 in Beijing Olympics (2008), 2–9, 7t, 94

  regulations of, 2

  in Tokyo and Seoul Olympics, 3

  particles (in Chinese language), 136, 140, 296, 398n62

  patent rights, in Communist China

  Pauthier, Jean-Pierre Guillaume, 89–103, 151, 154, 326, 351n38, 351n41. See also divisible type

  Peking Syllabary, 128

  People’s Daily, 290, 297

  People’s Liberation Army, 297

  People’s Republic of China, 79, 196 campaigns in, 284, 300

  “golden age” of typewriting in, 284–286

  in Korean War, 279–280

  model workers in, 288

  natural-language tray bed experiments and, 286–288

  Reform era, 79, 286

  seizure of Japanese interests, 232

  typewriter models in, 195

  People’s University, 294

  Peter Mitterhofer Schreibmaschinenmuseum, 58–59, 341n8

  Philadelphia Centennial Exposition (1876), 24, 55

  Philadelphia Commercial Museum, 188, 189

  Philadelphia Sesquicentennial International Exposition (1926), 161, 188–190, 192

  Philology and Ancient China (Karlgren), 67

  Philosophy of History, The (Hegel), 65

  phoneticization of Chinese, 8, 13, 264–265 Western dreams of, 183–187

  See also zhuyin fuhao

  phoneticization of Japanese, 203

  phonetics (structural components of Chinese script), 265

  piano playing, compared to typewriting, 179

  pictography, 68, 320

  pinyin, 8, 281, 338n12 in Chinese computer input, 240–241

  place names, on typewriter tray bed, 135, 295–296, 306, 396n35

  plaintext, 113–116, 318, 355n74

  Playing the Building (Byrne), 319

  pleremic script, 11–12

  point (dian), 5 as fundamental element of characters, 258, 259f

  politics of objects, 196, 198–199 kana typewriter and, 203

  Popular Science Monthly, 145

  predictive text, 319 analog roots of in typewriting, 286–288, 308

  “predictive turn,” 308, 309f

  Presbyterian Mission Press, 75

  prescriptive imperative, 87 in Sheffield’s typewriter, 135–136

  primary and secondary transcripts

  primers, character, 88, 142

  printing industry, Japanese, 201

  printing press, 170, 171. See also Linotype; Monotype; movable type

  pronunciation of Chinese, 9, 243

  propaganda, Chinese Communist, 284, 292

  Provençal troubadour poetry, 396n31

  “pseudo-radicals” (in MingKwai)

  Psychological Warfare Unit, Eighth United States Army in Korea, 280

  publishers, Chinese, 154

  punctuation, Western, 19 on typewriter tray beds, 366n19, 398n62

  Puyi (Kangde emperor), 213, 214

  Qi Xuan, 147–159, 148f, 204, 265, 267, 326, 362n76 debates Zhou Houkun, 157–158

  design of combinatorial typewriter, 149

  reception of typewriter, 154–159

  transnational ambitions of, 379n39

  See also typewriter models, Chinese: Qi Xuan typewriter

  Qian Xuantong, 13, 186, 264, 326 criticism of Chinese typewriter, 190–192

  Qianlong emperor, 82, 84

  Qing dynasty, 127, 147, 244 printing during, 82

  restored in Manchukuo, 213

  telegraphy and, 108, 115

  QQ, 241

  QWERTY keyboard, 238 training regimen on, 179

  used in Chinese computing, 9, 238–243, 315, 316, 319

  race science, refutation of, 68, 70

  racism, 40

  “radiating compounds,” 298, 301–302

  radicals (structural components of Chinese script), 83, 197, 256, 262, 348n12 in divisible type, 90–100, 99

  likened to prefixes, 265

  in MingKwai, 267, 271

  new character retrieval methods and, 250

  reimagined as equivalent of letters, 80, 94–96, 149, 156

  with shared orthographic features

  size and placement, 91, 92, 157–158

  as taxonomic entity, 95–96, 348n11

  in telegraphy, 104

  used in IMEs, 243

  radical-stroke organization system, 82–83, 256, 348n13, 349n19 in Chinese telegraph code, 110

  criticisms of, 190, 249, 296, 299

  departure from in Mao era, 286, 288, 290, 291, 298, 303, 304

  exceptions to in tray beds, 295–296

  in movable type, 348n14

  reaffirmed by typing reform committee, 302, 303

  relaxed in tray beds, 302–303, 397n50

  typewriter tray beds using, 143, 212, 307–308

  Rama V, King, 45, 49, 55, 341n13, 342n22

  Rama VI, King, 49, 341n13, 342n21, 342n22, 342n23

  Red Star Typewriter Company, 232

  Reed, Martin, 279

  reference materials anxiety about in China, 248–249

  Chinese, 15, 255, 258, 389n9

  made possible by codex form, 178

  refugee crisis in northeast China, 219

  Remington, Eliphalet, 46

  Remington Export Review, 182

  Remington News, 59

  Remington Rand. See Remington Typewriter Company

  Remington Typewriter Company, 28, 36, 42, 44–45, 48, 50, 343n33, 343n36, 343n45 Arabic typewriter and, 345n54

  argues for Japanese language reform, 203

  arrival in Siam, 51–55, 52f

  Chinese Phonetic Typewriter and, 182–183, 185–187, 265

  claims of universality by, 9–10

  as constitutive of modern technolinguistic consciousness, 31–32, 74

  failure to encompass Chinese, 10, 64, 71, 159, 199, 200

  feminization of typing and, 177

  founding of, 46

  globalization of, 55–57, 57f, 60, 123, 182

  Lin Yutang and, 272–275, 391n37

  purchases Smith Premier company, 51

  sale of Japanese kana typewriter, 202–203, 376n23

  Rémusat, Abel, 351n39

  repatriation of Japanese after Second World War, 230

  Republican era character retrieval and reference materials in, 247, 253–256

  iconoclasm in, 153, 299

  telegraphy in, 110, 115

  Resist Japan Association, 218

  retrieval of Chinese characters, 15 and “character retrieval problem,” 247–249, 250, 252–253, 255, 258, 260–261

  Communist push for proletarian taxonomy in, 299

  in computing, 316

  ethnographic viewpoint on, 253, 260–263, 270

  input and, 280

  MingKwai and, 245–246, 247

  new experimental methods of, 248, 249, 250–263, 251f, 270, 286

  predictive text and, 286

  slowness of, 248–249

  surrogacy and, 81

  in telegraphy, 104

  transposed to inscription, 247, 267

  in typing school curricula, 179–180

  See also Five-Stroke retrieval system; Lin Yutang; Shape-Position retrieval system

  revolution of 1911, 79, 147, 185, 213, 244, 371n55

  rhetoric, Communist, 286, 291, 292, 299–300 ingested into typist’s body, 304

  metacognitive distance from, 294–295

  Richardson, Ingrid, 290

  Rivista Olivetti,
56

  Robbins, Bruce, 23

  Rockefeller Foundation, 391n38

  Romance of the Three Kingdoms, 86

  Romanization of Chinese, 14, 19, 40, 128 as bound to fail, 184–185

  call for in Mao era, 279

  Romanization of Japanese, 376–377n28

  Ryōshin Minami, 201

  Sakai Yasujiro, 378n38

  Sakurada Tsunehisa, 222

  “same script, same race

  Sammons, Thomas, 145

  Sampson, Geoffrey, 69

  San Francisco Chronicle, 137, 276

  San Francisco Examiner, 35

  Schjellerup, H.C.F.C., 110

  Schurmann, Franz, 299–300

  Science and Civilization (Needham), 346n77

  scroll (textual form), 178

  searching. See retrieval of Chinese characters

  Second World War, 200, 221, 229–230

  Selleck, Tom, 38, 40, 43

  semiotics, 317

  semiotic sovereignty, 115, 121, 355n74

  Semi-Weekly Tribute, 136

  Shang dynasty, 71

  Shanghai, 109, 110, 145, 157, 216, 226, 244, 260 fall to Japanese forces, 220

  Japanese bombing of, 212, 218, 260

  typewriter manufacturing in, 161, 230

  typing schools in, 174–175

  Zhou Houkun in, 159, 165

  Shanghai Baptist College and Seminary, 143

  Shanghai Calculator and Typewriter Factory, 195, 233

  Shanghai Central Stadium, 215

  Shanghai Chamber of Commerce, 189, 218

  Shanghai Chinese Typewriter Manufacturers Association, 233

  Shanghai Machinery Import-Export Company, 233

  Shanghai Press, 188

  Shape-Position retrieval system, 260–263, 262f. See also Du Dingyou

  Sheffield, Devello Z., 123, 126–137, 139, 140, 143, 151, 326, 357n14, 358n20, 359n38, 362n68 Chinese clerks and, 129–130

  early version of invention, 127–128

  fate of typewriter, 136–137

  invention of Chinese typewriter prototype, 132–133

  missionary work, 129, 134–136

  See also typewriter models, Chinese: Sheffield typewriter

  Sheffield, Eleanor, 127

  Shen Yunfen, 297–298, 300

  Shenbao (periodical), 190, 214, 218, 219, 220

  Sheng Yaozhang, 228, 229

  Shibao (periodical), 176

  shift key, 46–47, 48, 129

  shift-keyboard typewriter, 46, 47, 48 dominance of, 44–45, 51, 56–59, 63

  encounter with foreign scripts, 59–63, 182

  inadequacy of for Chinese, 124

  Japanese typewriters and, 202

  MingKwai’s similarity to, 245

  as typewriter par excellence, 42

  See also typewriter, Western; typewriter form, universal

  Shimada Minokichi, 205, 326

  Shimizu Usaburō, 202

  Shinozawa Yūsaku, 209

  Sholes, Christopher Latham, 46, 123

  Shu Changyu. See Shu Zhendong

  Shu Zhendong, 167–169, 171, 229, 247, 326, 365n12, 366n14. See also typewriter models, Chinese: Shu-style typewriter

  shuru. See input

  “Shu Zhendong Chinese Typewriter, The” (animated film), 170, 171

  Siam, 45, 48–55, 342n23

  Siamese script, 45, 46, 47, 53–54, 64 changed to fit typewriter, 49

  Silicon Valley, 237, 238, 315

  Simpsons, The, 321

  Singapore, 196, 197, 199

  single-shift typewriter. See shift-keyboard typewriter

  Sino-Japanese War, First, 244

  Sino-Japanese War, Second. See War of Resistance Against Japan

  Smith, Arthur W., 345n54

  Smith, Lyman C., 47

  Smith Premier Typewriter Company, 47–48, 49, 342n23 demise of, 50–51

  presence in Bangkok, 50

  Snowden, Edward, 399n3

  social Darwinism. See evolutionism

  Société Asiatique de Paris, 89

  Song Mingde, 170–171

  Sonic Banana project, 319

  Southeast University of Commerce, 215

  Soviet Union, 230

  space, and spatial recognition of Chinese characters, 262 within divisible type, 99–100, 103, 149

  speed of typesetting, using natural-language arrangement, 290–291, 292, 294, 395n26

  speed of typing, 27 average, in Mao era, 288

  on index typewriter, 343n37

  on Qi Xuan typewriter, 154

  on Shu-style typewriter, 170, 190

  using natural-language tray bed, 286, 288, 298, 311

  Western notions of, on Chinese typewriter, 320

  on Zhou Houkun typewriter, 165

  Spurgin, Richard A., 61

  State Department, U.S., 279

  Staunton, George, 84–85, 88, 89, 100, 132, 327

  Steele, Herbert H., 344n52

  Stellman, Louis John, 36, 41, 43

  stenography, 317–318

  Stickney, Burnham, 204

  St. John’s University, 244

  St. Louis Globe-Democrat, 36

  Strauss Festival Orchestra Vienna, 27

  stroke count, materiality of in character slugs, 180

  stroke-count organization, 4, 8, 83, 302 mocked by Olympic commentators, 3

  stroke ranking, 6

  strokes (bihua), 131–132, 243, 256 as elemental unit of script, 94–95

  See also eight fundamental strokes

  “study sessions,” 284, 285

  Suchman, Lucy, 307

  Sugimoto Kyōta, 204, 209, 211, 327

  Suiyuan province, 220

  Sun Yat-sen, 230, 371n55

  surrogacy, 79, 121, 316 in Chinese telegraphy, 103–121

  definition of, 80–81

  MingKwai and, 265, 270

  surveillance, 256, 284, 399n3

  Sushan, 215

  synaesthesia, 261

  Syracuse, New York, 47, 48 relationship with Bangkok, 50, 342n23

  “Table of 214 Keys and Their Variants” (Tableau des 214 clefs et leurs variants) (Legrand), 92, 93f

  Tai, Evelyn (pseudonym), 196–199, 200, 233, 374n2

  Tai, Maria (pseudonym), 197–199, 374n2

  Taipisuto (magazine), 205, 207, 208f, 222–223

  taipuraitā. See typewriter, Japanese

  Taiwan, 195–196, 223, 244

  Tanakadate Aikitsu, 377n28

  Tang Chongli, 171

  Tao Minzhi, 233, 384n93

  Tao Xingshi, 142

  Tap-Key (imaginary inventor), 36–37, 40, 41, 42, 45, 65, 74, 193, 316, 320, 327

  taxonomic evenness, 270

  Tcherkassov, Baron Paul, 62

  Teaching of Words, The (Fukuzawa)

  technolinguistic imagination, collapse of, 42–45, 54, 316

  technolinguistic realm, 18–23, 72, 339n23 definition of, 17

  “technological abyss,” 24, 26, 243

  technological fitness, denigration of Chinese according to, 44, 71–72, 346n77

  technosomatic complex. See bodies, human

  Tekniska Museet, 320

  telecommunication, 317, 318

  telegraph code books, 81, 104, 113, 355n74 changes to, 117, 120

  for Chinese telegraphy, 110, 121

  during Nationalist military campaign, 254

  telegraph code of 1871, Chinese, 110–121, 111f, 201, 254, 265, 354n66 adjustments to, 116, 354n70

  and Chinese as inherently secret language, 114

  disadvantages of, 112, 114–115, 355n74

  exempted as plaintext, 115

  taking “symbolic possession” of

  Telegraph-Herald, 185

  “telegraph sovereignty

  telegraphy, 9 causes sense of crisis in China, 248

  Chinese, 24, 25, 74, 80, 103–121, 131, 178, 240, 265

  global expansion of, 106, 107–108, 109–110, 114, 354n73

  international regulations, 107, 113, 355n74, 356n76
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  Japanese, 201

  Japanese domination of in China, 221–222

  MingKwai system and, 279

  and non-Western scripts, 108

  structural inequality of China within, 114, 116, 121, 355–356n74

  telephone, 55

  terrain, Chinese language portrayed as, 83, 85, 191–192

  Tewksbury, Reverend E.G., 185

  textbooks, typing, 180, 301, 303

  thimble linking (dingzhen xuxian), 294, 395–396n31

  Thirteen Classics, 86

  “Three People’s Principles” (Sun Yat-sen), 230

  Tianjin, 128, 133, 222, 232, 278 typing reform committee in

  Tianjin, Treaty of, 127

  Times (London), 320

  tinkering, 307

  Titsingh, Isaac, 351n39

  Today! (journal), 286

  Tokugawa period, Japan, 248

  Tokyo, firebombing of, 229

  tones (in Chinese), 185

  Tong Lisheng, 233

  Tongji (periodical), 171

  Tongzhou, 126, 127, 132

  Too Much to Know (Blair), 247–248

  Toshiba, 205

  Touch Method, 51

  training drills. See under tray bed

  “transnational culturalism” in East Asia, 209–210, 211

  tray bed (typewriter part), 30, 169, 199, 226, 295, 298 absence of in MingKwai, 265, 267

  adjacency of characters on, 288–290, 296

  Communist terms on, 294–295

  democratization of, 300, 304, 308, 398n62

  how to rearrange, 305–306

  on Japanese-built Chinese typewriters, 212

  on Japanese typewriter, 205

  memorization of characters on, 178, 197, 211, 305–306, 311

  move to standardize, 301–303

  with “out-of-the-box” natural-language arrangement, 303

 

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