A Grammar of Colloquial Chinese, as Exhibited in the Shanghai Dialect by Edkins

(4 User reviews)   861
By Karen Choi Posted on Apr 1, 2026
In Category - Sea Exploration
Edkins, Joseph, 1823-1905 Edkins, Joseph, 1823-1905
English
Okay, hear me out. I know a 19th-century grammar book doesn't sound like a page-turner. But what if I told you this dusty old volume is actually a secret time capsule? It's not just about verbs and nouns. Joseph Edkins, a missionary in 1850s Shanghai, wrote this guide because he was utterly baffled. He was trying to talk to people in one of the world's busiest ports and kept hitting a wall. The 'official' Chinese he learned was useless on the chaotic, vibrant streets. His book is the record of that struggle—a brilliant, stubborn outsider trying to crack the code of a living, breathing language everyone used but no one had written down. It's a detective story where the mystery is how to order a bowl of noodles. Trust me, it's way more fascinating than it sounds.
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Forget dry rules and conjugation charts. Joseph Edkins didn't write a textbook; he wrote a field guide for survival. Arriving in Shanghai in the 1850s, he discovered a gaping hole between the classical Chinese of scholars and the rapid-fire, slang-filled talk of the docks, markets, and tea houses. No one had bothered to document how people actually spoke. So, he did. The 'plot' here is his meticulous, often frustrating quest to listen, record, and systematize a language in motion.

The Story

Think of it less as a story with characters and more as an intellectual adventure. The 'protagonist' is Edkins himself, armed with a notebook and endless curiosity, wandering through a foreign city. The 'antagonist' is the elusive, ever-shifting nature of spoken Shanghainese. Each chapter tackles a different piece of the puzzle: tones that change meaning, particles that convey attitude, sentence structures that defy his European training. He gathers examples from street vendors, laborers, and merchants, painstakingly translating phrases about weather, business, and daily gossip. The drama is in his observations—the 'aha!' moments when a pattern clicks, and the confessed confusions when local idioms leave him stumped.

Why You Should Read It

This book grabbed me because it's so human. You feel Edkins' determination and his occasional exasperation. It's a raw, unfiltered look at cultural collision. You're not just learning about 19th-century Shanghainese; you're seeing a massive, global port city through the keen eyes of someone trying to make sense of it, one conversation at a time. It turns linguistics into something urgent and personal. It reminds us that language isn't a dead set of rules in a book, but a messy, beautiful tool people use to live their lives.

Final Verdict

This isn't for everyone. If you want a straight novel, look elsewhere. But if you're the kind of person who loves history, linguistics, or just great stories about curious minds, give this a look. It's perfect for language nerds, historians fascinated by everyday life, and anyone who enjoys seeing how a dedicated outsider can become the first person to map uncharted territory—even if that territory is the way people chat while buying vegetables.

Emma Moore
6 months ago

I came across this while browsing and the depth of research presented here is truly commendable. Highly recommended.

Elijah Flores
1 year ago

Amazing book.

Joseph Hill
1 year ago

Great digital experience compared to other versions.

Mary Anderson
1 year ago

After hearing about this author multiple times, the storytelling feels authentic and emotionally grounded. A valuable addition to my collection.

5
5 out of 5 (4 User reviews )

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