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title Hocbigg - Classical Chinese
description Path to a free self-taught education in Classical Chinese!

Contents

Summary

The Classical Chinese curriculum is a complete education in Classical Chinese (文言文) using online materials.

The focus is on reading comprehension, grammatical mastery, textual analysis, and cultural/historical context, with balanced attention to theory (grammar and philology), practice (translation and reading), and synthesis (interpretation and application).

The resource page can be found here: classical-chinese/resources.

Organization

This repository is organized into 2 main components:

  • Core Curriculum (this page): the foundational knowledge of the field;
  • Advanced Topics: focused study in specific areas;

Process: Learners may work through the curriculum independently or collaboratively, and either sequentially or selectively.

  • For simplicity, courses in the Core Curriculum are ordered according to their prerequisites.
  • The Core Curriculum provides a shared foundation and is intended to be completed in full.
  • Advanced Topics are optional; learners are encouraged to select one area of focus and complete all courses within that topic.

Note: When there are courses or books that don't fit into the curriculum but are otherwise of high quality, they belong in extras/courses, extras/readings.

How to contribute

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Curriculum

How to use this curriculum

Core

These four sections form the essential foundation. Work through them one after another — do not skip or jump ahead.

  1. I. Foundations of Classical Chinese
    Start here. This part teaches you how to read and understand the language itself.

  2. II. Core Classical Chinese Texts
    Next, read the most influential early texts that shaped the entire tradition. Finish both subsections (3 and 4) before moving on.

  3. III. Literary Culture
    Then move into the major literary forms (poetry and prose). Complete both subsections (5 and 6).

  4. IV. Later Intellectual Traditions (only the first subsection: Song Thought)
    Finish the curriculum by studying how the earlier ideas were reinterpreted in later centuries. Read the “Song Thought” part of section 7.

Once you have completed this Core path, you will have a coherent, well-rounded understanding of Classical Chinese language, major texts, literary tradition, and its intellectual development — equivalent to the core of an undergraduate major.

Advanced

After finishing the Core path, choose one or both of the following tracks depending on your interests:

  • Advanced Daoism (the second part of section 7): Choose this track if you are especially drawn to philosophical imagination, paradox, and non-Confucian ways of thinking.
  • Deeper focus on poetry: Return to section 5 and read more widely in Tang poetry (or continue with other poets) if you love concise, emotional, and imagistic writing.

Foundations of Classical Chinese

1. Core Language System

Subject Why study? Book Online Resource
Introductory Grammar It teaches you the basic sentence structures and rules needed to read classical texts without modern Chinese grammar getting in the way. Paul Rouzer – A New Practical Primer of Literary Chinese (Harvard University Press preview & details) (Archive.org borrow may be available in some regions; full free access limited)
Particles & Syntax It helps you understand how small words and word order create meaning in classical sentences. Wikibooks: Classical Chinese
Lexicon & Word Meanings It gives you the precise classical meanings of characters, which are often very different from modern usage. Chinese Text Project Dictionary

2. Reading & Parsing Skills

Subject Why study? Book Online Resource
Graded Reading It builds your ability to read real classical sentences step by step with increasing difficulty. Rouzer (same as above)
Annotated Classical Texts It shows you how experts explain difficult passages, so you can learn to understand them yourself. Chinese Text Project (ctext.org)
Parallel Translations It lets you compare the original text with clear English versions to quickly grasp meaning and style. CTP + Legge & Watson public-domain translations

Core Classical Chinese Texts

3. Early Prose and Thought (Pre-Qin)

Subject Why study? Book Online Resource
Confucius, Mozi, Laozi, Zhuangzi These texts form the foundation of Chinese philosophy and give you the core ideas that shaped Chinese thought for over 2000 years. Ivanhoe & Van Norden – Readings in Classical Chinese Philosophy Chinese Text Project
Grammar in Context It teaches you how classical grammar actually works in famous real texts instead of abstract rules. Fuller – Introduction to Literary Chinese (Archive.org borrow)

4. Qin–Han Historical and Administrative Prose

Subject Why study? Book Online Resource
Shiji, Hanshu They are the most important historical works in Chinese tradition and teach you how early historians narrated events and people. Selections from Records of the Grand Historian (Burton Watson translation, Qin dynasty focus; Han volumes also available) Chinese Text Project
Historiographic Style It helps you recognize the special narrative techniques and language used in official Chinese historical writing. CUHK Classics of Chinese Humanities (Coursera)

Literary Culture

5. Poetry

Subject Why study? Book Online Resource
Shi, Yuefu, Ci These forms contain some of the most beautiful and emotionally powerful expressions in Chinese literature. Stephen Owen – Anthology Paula Varsano YouTube (lecture series on Classical Chinese Poetry)
Tang Poetry Tang poems represent the highest achievement in Chinese poetic art and give you mastery of concise, vivid imagery. Li Bai & Du Fu (public-domain selections) Chinese Text Project

6. Prose and Literary Style

Subject Why study? Book Online Resource
Guwen (Ancient-Style Prose) It teaches you the clear, elegant prose style that became the model for serious writing for over a thousand years. Han Yu & Liu Zongyuan (Archive.org selections) (collections including their works) CUHK Coursera

Later Intellectual Traditions

7. Neo-Confucianism and Daoism

Subject Why study? Book Online Resource
Song Thought It shows how later thinkers reinterpreted and deepened classical Confucian ideas into a complete philosophical system. Sources of Chinese Tradition Vol. 1 CUHK Coursera
Advanced Daoism It gives you deeper insight into Daoist philosophy through its most sophisticated and imaginative text. Zhuangzi (Watson) (full translation) Chinese Text Project

Final Projects

Project Options:

  • Annotated translation of a medium-length text (e.g., one Zhuangzi chapter or Tang poem cycle, 2000–5000 characters).
  • Research essay comparing themes across texts (e.g., "Concepts of Dao in Laozi and Zhuangzi").
  • Critical edition/exegesis of a short passage with commentary.

Congratulations

After completing the requirements of the curriculum above, you will have completed the equivalent of a full bachelor's degree in Classical Chinese. Congratulations!

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