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Introduction to Classical Chinese

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1968. 127 pages. Red pictorial dust jacket over orange cloth. Pages are clean and bright, and appear almost good as new. With minimal tanning throughout. Binding has remained firm. Boards are a little rub worn, slight shelf wear to corners, spine and edges. Corners are a little bumped. Spine ends are mildly crushed. Light tanning to spine and edges. Light wear to unclipped dust jacket with tears, nicks and creases to spine, edge and corners. Light tanning to spine and edges.

Hardcover

First published February 28, 1978

3 people want to read

About the author

Raymond Stanley Dawson was born in London, 15 February, 1923, and was
educated at Emanuel School, evacuated from London to Petersfield,
Hampshire, and then went up to Oxford.

At the outbreak of war Dawson joined the Royal Air Force, and trained
in South Africa as a navigator, & flew missions until late in WW2.

After the war he returned to Oxford, graduated in Greats in 1947. He
was invited to stay on at the university to read Chinese.

The Scarbrough scheme that funded this post-war cohort of students was
designed to create a group of potential teachers of Asian languages in
post-war Britain.

He was appointed Lecturer in Chinese Religion and Philosophy, Durham
University in 1952, which marked the foundation of Chinese Studies in
that University. He also began a lifelong career as crossword setter
for the New Statesman. He began this sideline in 1952 under the name
of Setsquare, and produced a monthly cryptic crossword for the next 50
years.

In 1958 Dawson launched an Honours course in Chinese.

Dawson was Spalding Lecturer in Chinese Language and Civilisation,
1957-61; University lecturer in Chinese, Oxford University, 1961-90;
Fellow, Wadham College, Oxford, 1963-90 [Emeritus].

Dawson published a string of works for Oxford University Press,
including *The Chinese Chameleon: an analysis of European conceptions
of Chinese civilisation* [1967], and *Confucius* [1981] for the OUP
Past Masters series.

He served on the university's General Board and building up a strong
tradition of Asian language studies in Wadham.

Beyond the university he reached a wide audience with a steady flow of
accessible books on aspects of Chinese history and society,
translations of classic texts, and a much-reprinted Introduction to
Classical Chinese (1968).

He married in 1944, Eve Harding, by whom he had two sons and one
daughter.

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