“Sacred, the Laborers”: Writing Chinese in the First World War

Yurou Zhong
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

ABSTRACT:This article focuses on the Chinese laborers in World War I France and their writing activities there. As the story of these laborers has been systematically overlooked in the history of World War I and the subsequent May Fourth Movement, this article endeavors to write the laborers back into the historical narrative that connects China, World War I, and May Fourth. It zooms in on how writing became crucial to the laborers and to the very program under which they were recruited. Between the laborers and a group of volunteers sent by the Young Men's Christian Association (YMCA), there emerged the first modern Chinese mass literacy program. Writing became, on the one hand, a technology that supported the Allied war effort; on the other, it afforded a medium through which the laborers performed a test run of the new modern Chinese language that ushered in Chinese linguistic and literary modernity. An invaluable piece of writing produced by one of the laborers demonstrates how the “sacred laborers,” not unlike their intellectual counterparts, drove home the critique of the Great War and a particular version of the Chinese Enlightenment.
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“神圣的劳动者”:第一次世界大战中的汉语写作
摘要:本文主要介绍一战法国的华工及其在法国的写作活动。由于这些劳工的故事在第一次世界大战和随后的五四运动史上一直被系统地忽视,本文试图将这些劳工写回到连接中国、第一次世界战争和五四的历史叙事中。它放大了写作是如何对劳工和他们被招募的项目至关重要的。在劳工和基督教青年会(YMCA)派出的一群志愿者之间,出现了中国第一个现代大众扫盲项目。一方面,写作成为一种支持盟军战争努力的技术;另一方面,它为劳动者提供了一种媒介,通过这种媒介,他们对新的现代汉语进行了试运行,从而开创了中国语言和文学的现代性。其中一位劳工创作的一篇宝贵的作品展示了“神圣的劳工”是如何与他们的知识分子同行一样,将对大战和中国启蒙运动的批判带回家的。
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