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6 - Mongolian Translations of Old Chinese Novels and Stories — A Tentative Bibliographic Survey

from PART II - MAINLAND NORTHEAST ASIA

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 October 2015

Boris Riftin
Affiliation:
The Academy of Sciences of the USSR, Moscow
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Summary

An American Sinologist, Stephen W. Durrant, in a short note in 1979 raised the question of the importance of studying Manchu and Mongolian translations of old Chinese novels. Indeed, a close study of these translations, the majority of which are preserved in the form of manuscripts, can contribute much that is new not only to the history of Manchu and Mongolian literature or to the study of literary relations in the Far East from the seventeenth to the twentieth century, but also, to a certain extent, to the history of Chinese literature itself. It would be ideal of course to study Manchu and Mongolian translations of Chinese novels simultaneously, since the Mongols often translated from Manchu rather than from Chinese. However, this study would go beyond the capabilities of the author of the present article, who has limited his task to the study of Mongolian translations only.

If, for example, Manchu translations of Chinese novels, undertaken from the mid-seventeenth to the beginning of the nineteenth century remained a fact of translated Manchu literature itself, Chinese novels, having found their way to the Mongols on the one hand with their plots gave life to a special genre of oral Mongolian tales — the bensen üliger, Mongolian song-narrative works based on Chinese novels, and these novels on the other hand became a basis for the creation in the mid-nineteenth century of the first Mongolian novels such as Köke sudur, “The Blue Chronicle”, Nigen dabqur asar, “The One-Story Pavilion”, Ulaghan-a ukilaqu tingkim, “The Scarlet Pavilion of Tears” and Tabun ǰuwan, “Five Tales”. It is known, for example, that in “The Blue Chronicle” by Wangcinbala and his son Inǰannasi, there are episodes inspired by corresponding passages from Luo Guanzhong 's “Romance of the Three Kingdoms”, while “the One-Story Pavilion” by Inǰannasi is a creative reworking of Cao Xuejin 's “Dream of the Red Chamber”.

The first information on the existence of Mongolian translations of Chinese novels was obtained by accident. At the end of the last century, the famous German Sinologist Wilhem Grube purchased in Beijing an old Mongolian manuscript — a translation of the Chinese novel Fan Tang yanyi “Tale of the Revolt against the Tang Dynasty”.

Type
Chapter
Information
Literary Migrations
Traditional Chinese Fiction in Asia (17th–20th Centuries)
, pp. 130 - 160
Publisher: ISEAS–Yusof Ishak Institute
Print publication year: 2013

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