Status Updates From Myths and Legends of China
Myths and Legends of China by
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Christie
is 17% done
Dear Lord! When WAS this written? The author labours under the delusion that Chinese people are descendents of blonde Babylonians, seeming to refer to the Tower of Babel as an historic event. I don't know if I'm going to be able to finish this.
— Sep 14, 2022 03:53PM
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Christie
is 12% done
Ay yi yi. Save yourself a lot of pain and read about traditional Chinese culture on Wikipedia or something. By all means skip chapter 1 of this book. It is incredibly racist and the racism obscures the facts. I know this is an old book but geez.
— Sep 14, 2022 03:05PM
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mantareads
is on page 355 of 496
The stories I dont know are told so poorly as to be bland; and the excerpts of the ones which I DO know, like the exploits of Wukong and Gang, are told so nonchalantly as to be unexciting, uninspiring. This guy is a shit storyteller in addition to being a dishonest imperialist.
— Mar 05, 2021 06:26AM
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William Timmes
is on page 76 of 509
I was given advice from self help / tutorials that I should skip certain parts of books that I'm bored by in order to finish them. Hence why I'm here.
— Mar 04, 2021 07:12PM
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mantareads
is on page 200 of 496
Actually this book has so much potential. It is just further ruined by the occasional additional condescending commentary that the writer feels compelled to layer on to the myths he tries to retell, so that a particular Daoist Saint or mythical hero is (often inexplicably) made to sound weirdly unscrupulous or unethical for no real reason. I'm really starting to feel such such immense distaste for this book.
— Mar 03, 2021 02:19AM
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mantareads
is on page 134 of 496
It's often not that the story is boring. It's that the storyteller is mediocre.
After creating a vague, sweeping category, Werner lumps "myths" he's picked up and recites them so flaccidly that they blur into each other.
So much for characterising the Chinese as being "crude", "primitive" and "vague".
— Mar 02, 2021 07:49PM
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After creating a vague, sweeping category, Werner lumps "myths" he's picked up and recites them so flaccidly that they blur into each other.
So much for characterising the Chinese as being "crude", "primitive" and "vague".
mantareads
is on page 75 of 496
Werner writes in 1922 with so much arrogant assuredness about Chinese myth, but it has aged like milk.
The first 2 chapters are a poorly attempted, crude, lazy and ahistorical "sociology" of Chinese civilisation.
Even colonial administrators in Singapore were writing more balanced accounts of "the natives" by this time; I fail to see how anyone can write so condescendingly about the Chinese by the 1920s.
— Mar 02, 2021 07:27AM
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The first 2 chapters are a poorly attempted, crude, lazy and ahistorical "sociology" of Chinese civilisation.
Even colonial administrators in Singapore were writing more balanced accounts of "the natives" by this time; I fail to see how anyone can write so condescendingly about the Chinese by the 1920s.
mantareads
is on page 56 of 496
"What progress was made was due to European instruction"
Man of his time, etc. I can grant this text that, despite all the problematic statements he makes about the chinese in this early 20th-century text, just before Western imperialism fucks itself over.
But how appalling that Werner writes about Chinese opium without referencing the British role in it. What a dishonest, ahistorical pseudo-intellectual.
— Mar 02, 2021 07:18AM
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Man of his time, etc. I can grant this text that, despite all the problematic statements he makes about the chinese in this early 20th-century text, just before Western imperialism fucks itself over.
But how appalling that Werner writes about Chinese opium without referencing the British role in it. What a dishonest, ahistorical pseudo-intellectual.
William Timmes
is starting
I'm rereading the part where they talk about the sociology. I didn't pay attention to that chapter, but it's important information.
— Nov 16, 2020 04:28PM
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