中国与荷兰报纸上的中国礼仪之争

B. Dooley, J. Raymond, Joop Koopman, M. V. Groesen, H. Helmers
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摘要

17世纪最后25年,欧洲和中国的发展改变了荷兰读者对中国的印象本章探讨了17世纪最后几十年在荷兰共和国印刷的报纸和期刊是如何报道和讨论孔子和所谓的中国礼制之争的。在这方面,本章研究了耶稣会传教的变化,结合印刷媒体的生产、发行和可用性的发展,如何产生了中国及其宗教和哲学的形象,这些形象越来越多地集中在中国礼仪争议和对耶稣会传教方式的谴责上。此外,在17世纪的过程中,荷兰制造的新闻越来越多地受到法国文化和语言的影响。这些变化影响了对中国和孔子的描述,荷兰的印刷商、出版商和书商由此逐渐制作和传播高卢式的中央王国形象。近年来,早期现代新闻文化受到了相当大的关注。布伦丹·杜利(Brendan Dooley)、乔德·雷蒙德(Joad Raymond)、乔普·库普曼(Joop Koopman)和保罗·阿布拉斯特(Paul Arblaster)等学者都主张对新闻的解释主要集中在生产和分发上他们的注意力集中在定期出版物的出现,以及通过图书生产商、翻译人员、商人、传教士、外交官和宗教移民组成的国际网络传播新闻。这一领域的研究也调查了新闻与舆论之间的关系。例如,将新闻文化作为早期现代图书市场的一部分
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China and the Chinese Rites Controversy in Dutch Newspapers
In the last quarter of the seventeenth century, developments in both Europe and China changed the manner in which the Middle Kingdom was represented to Dutch readers.1 This chapter explores how newspapers and periodicals printed in the Dutch Republic during the final decades of the seventeenth century reported and discussed Confucius and the so-called Chinese Rites Controversy. In this regard, this chapter examines how changes in the Jesuit mission, combined with developments in production, distribution, and availability of printed media, produced an image of China and its religion and philosophy that was increasingly focused on the Chinese Rites Controversy and the condemnation of the Jesuit missionary approach. Furthermore, over the course of the seventeenth century, Dutch-made news became influenced more and more by French culture and language. These shifts impacted representations of China and Confucius, whereby Dutch printers, publishers, and booksellers produced and distributed a progressively Gallican image of the Middle Kingdom. The early modern culture of news has received considerable attention in recent years. Scholars like Brendan Dooley, Joad Raymond, Joop Koopman, and Paul Arblaster have all advocated an interpretation of news that focuses primarily on production and distribution.2 Their attention has concentrated on the emergence of the periodic press and the distribution of news through international networks of book producers, translators, merchants, missionaries, diplomats, and religious immigrants. Research in this field has also investigated the relationship between news and public opinion. For example, an approach towards news culture as part of the early modern book market has
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The Vernacular and Latin Translations of Confucius The Dutch Commodification of Confucius Confucius in Dutch-Made Learned Journals China’s Religion and Philosophy in Dutch-Made Books, 1595–1687 China and the Chinese Rites Controversy in Dutch Newspapers
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