Skip to product information
1 of 1

With One Voice

Regular price $100.00
Regular price $0.00 Sale price $100.00
Sold out
Mandarin is one of the most-spoken languages in the world. But when it was codified as the new national language in China between the 1910s and 1930s, its artificiality was such that only a handful...
Read More
  • 17 November 2026
View Product Details

Mandarin is one of the most-spoken languages in the world. But when it was codified as the new national language in China between the 1910s and 1930s, its artificiality was such that only a handful of people could speak it with any fluency. The state-led creation and spread of China's national language is thus arguably the largest instance of social engineering in human history. What took centuries to accomplish in Europe was compressed into a mere three decades in China. How did this national linguistic unification happen? And, more broadly, what can this process teach us about the role of language in society?

  Drawing from libraries and archives across the United States, Taiwan, Hong Kong, and mainland China, With One Voice examines the Chinese state's efforts to standardize and elevate a new national language — the transition from classical Chinese to modern standard Mandarin in the early twentieth century. Jeffrey Weng argues that the ultimate form of the language was not inevitable. Rather, it emerged from a tangle of disputes and decisions made in the early years of the republic, representing a particular vision of Chinese society: unitary and egalitarian. Weng reconstructs and reinterprets events in early twentieth-century China, offering a fresh view of how social change take place and how nations are made through cultural reinvention.

files/i.png Icon
Price: $100.00
Pages: 184
Publisher: Stanford University Press
Imprint: Stanford University Press
Publication Date: 17 November 2026
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9781503647688
Format: Hardcover
REVIEWS Icon
"Thanks in part to creative digging and mining previously ignored sources, Jeff Weng has produced an impressive new analysis of Chinese language, nationalism, and linguistic reform. No scholarly book has come at language reform from so many angles, mixing discussion of spoken and written Mandarin language issues in quite the way he does."—Jeffrey Wasserstrom, University of California, Irvine

"By tracing the contested invention of Mandarin as an 'intensively cultivated artificial language' in twentieth-century China, Jeffrey Weng dissects the interplay of power, society, and culture, pioneering a historical-comparative sociology of language while demythologizing the hegemony of Mandarin Chinese."—Ho-fung Hung, Johns Hopkins University
Jeffrey Weng is Assistant Professor of Sociology at National Taiwan University.