The Chinese Computer: A Global History of the Information Age

The Chinese Computer: A Global History of the Information Age

by Thomas S. Mullaney
The Chinese Computer: A Global History of the Information Age

The Chinese Computer: A Global History of the Information Age

by Thomas S. Mullaney

eBook

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Available for Pre-Order. This item will be available on May 28, 2024

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Overview

The fascinating, untold story of how the Chinese language overcame unparalleled challenges and revolutionized the world of computing.

A standard QWERTY keyboard has a few dozen keys. How can Chinese—a language with tens of thousands of characters and no alphabet—be input on such a device? In The Chinese Computer, Thomas S. Mullaney sets out to resolve this paradox, and in doing so, discovers that the key to this seemingly impossible riddle has given rise to a new epoch in the history of writing—a form of writing he calls “hypography.” Based on fifteen years of research, this pathbreaking history of the Chinese language charts the beginnings of electronic Chinese technology in the wake of World War II up through to its many iterations in the present day.

Mullaney takes the reader back through the history and evolution of Chinese language computing technology, showing the development of electronic Chinese input methods—software programs that enable Chinese characters to be produced using alphanumeric symbols—and the profound impact they have had on the way Chinese is written. Along the way, Mullaney introduces a cast of brilliant and eccentric personalities drawn from the ranks of IBM, MIT, the CIA, the Pentagon, the Taiwanese military, and the highest rungs of mainland Chinese establishment, to name a few, and the unexpected roles they played in developing Chinese language computing. Finally, he shows how China and the non-Western world—because of the hypographic technologies they had to invent in order to join the personal computing revolution—“saved” the Western computer from its deep biases, enabling it to achieve a meaningful presence in markets outside of the Americas and Europe.

An eminently engaging and artfully told history, The Chinese Computer is a must-read for anyone interested in how culture informs computing and how computing, in turn, shapes culture.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780262372435
Publisher: MIT Press
Publication date: 05/28/2024
Sold by: Penguin Random House Publisher Services
Format: eBook
Pages: 376
Sales rank: 771,492
File size: 5 MB

About the Author

Thomas S. Mullaney is Professor of Chinese History at Stanford University and a Guggenheim Fellow. He is the author of The Chinese Typewriter: A History, Where Research Begins, and Coming to Terms with the Nation: Ethnic Classification in Modern China.

What People are Saying About This

From the Publisher

“A vivid, precise, and challenging history of the inventors and technicians who taught computers a different way to write. The Chinese Computer deprovincializes the history of computing.”
—Anthony Grafton, Princeton University
 
“Mullaney’s fascinating and dexterously researched book illuminates the breadth of ingenuity it took to make Western computers compatible with Chinese characters. By asking what it means to write in the computer age, this important work opens new directions in computer history.”
—Eden Medina, MIT Program in Science, Technology, and Society
 
“Mullaney rewrites the script of global computing history through this riveting account of Chinese input in the digital age. Cleverly conceived and exquisitely researched, The Chinese Computer is a triumph.”
—Victor Seow, author of Carbon Technocracy
 
“Mullaney’s gripping narrative, brimming with historical and technological insights, makes the bold claim that Chinese-language computing has already changed the very nature of writing itself.”
—Zev Handel, author of Sinography
 
“This wonderful book chronicles events that would have otherwise been lost: how the computer enabled Chinese input to evolve into today’s highly efficient forms.”
—Ken Lunde, author of CJKV Information Processing
 
“The book unveils a captivating history of inventions for Chinese computer input, previously unknown to even experts in human-computer interaction, now revealed for the first time.”
—Shumin Zhai, Principal Scientist and Director of Gboard, Google

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