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Rating: Summary: Good in lots of ways Review: I'd like to start by saying that this is a review by a general-interest reader. A serious scholar would certainly come away with a different impression.
The book has a lot to like. It's a Watson translation, and it lives up to his usual high standards of readability. Watson has compressed the book, omitting many sections generally taken to be tedious. He does give profuse notes, however, describing the omissions and enriching understanding of the text.
The text itself covers the Spring and Autumn period of Chinese history, about 250 years ending somwehat after Confucius' death. (This is not the Spring and Autumn Annals, though.) The Tso Chuan describes many major figures to which reference is made in later literature. It decribes major wars of the period, court intrigues, prophecies, moral lessons, gallantry, and treachery. All of these come through in anecdotes usually a page or two long.
The anecdotal style is the first of my problems with the book. It looks more like a series of isolated snapshots, less like a unified whole. I guess I'm used to modern histories, where commentary and causal connection help the reader see the larger picture. Also, Watson softened the blow, but the Tso Chuan still hits the reader with many alternative names and titles for historical figures. Place names often referred to cities or states long gone, or referred to them in allusive ways. My western ear is poorly tuned to Chinese names to start with, so this just caused confusion. It's embarassingly easy to see why Japanese scholars have a term set aside for readers who intend to go through the whole text, but abandon the effort early on.
Many of the stories are amusing, many display the morals or beliefs of the time, and many describe events of great cultural importance. On the whole, though, the general-interest reader will need discipline to work through this book. Its kaleidoscopic shifts of unfamiliar people, place, time, and events can be very hard to follow.
//wiredweird
Rating: Summary: Ian Myles Slater on History Disguised as Commentary Review: The "Tso Chuan" is a massive history -- or set of chronicles and stories -- of early China, originally presented as commentaries on the extremely concise "Spring and Autumn Annals" ascribed to Confucius. In fact it amounts to a remarkable account of the Chinese feudal states and their rulers as the Chou Dynasty faded. Burton Watson has presented some of the most famous stories, set out to make the narratives clear, in his usual elegant English. It is an engaging presentation, which leaves this reader, at least, wanting more. Since Watson has already given us so much other important Chinese literature, it seems churlish to complain this book is too short, but it is also a tribute to his literary skill -- and possibly to his editorial judgment.There is an earlier, and complete translation by James Legge, as "The Chun Tsew with the Tso Chuen" (Chinese Classics Series). The seemingly inexhaustible Legge's Victorian translation (still available in an edition with Chinese texts) unfortunately prints the "Tso Chuan" in extremely small type, treating it as secondary to the supposedly Confucian Annals. A reader who attempts to follow a story will find many obstacles. Legge's nineteenth-century transliterations also make identifying references difficult for those of us who lack any command of Chinese.
Rating: Summary: Ancient Chinese history in one compact package Review: This book is quite interesting. Right now, I cannot remember whether the Spring and Autumn Annals came from this of vice versa but either way, both books report on the same era of ancient Chinese history. The Tso chuan groups its stories into very readable sections. Most of the stories teach some sort of moral lesson, some of which are still applicable today. the only fault with the book is the amount of names and since I am not an expert by any means in Chinese, the names were quite similar to me and and I easily confused them. But other than that, this was a very interesting book.
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