Chinese paratactic grammar is a syntactic
concept coined by Zhang Li in his Deep Choice of Culture: The Theory of
Chinese Paratactic Grammar (Jilin
Education Publishing House, 1994). Ever since then, Zhang has never stopped his
research into this theory over the past 20-plus years, bringing out works such
as An Outline of Chinese Paratactic
Grammar (2001) and On Chinese
Paratactic Grammar: A Construction Based on Types of Cognition and Logic of
Language (2012). As a summary of Zhang’s latest research findings about
Chinese paratactic grammar, this book is the first that Zhang has published in
China on this topic.
The
book contains a macroscopic rendering of paratactic grammar as well as
microscopic analyses and discussions of problems specific to Chinese. It
provides a new theoretical perspective for the studies of Chinese grammar and
the teaching of CFL grammar, thus having great academic value.
Mr. Zhang Li, born in Changchun, Jilin Province, obtained his Ph.D.
degree from the Chinese Department of Fudan University in 1991. Mr. Zhang has
been working in Japan since 1992 and is now a professor in Osaka Sangyo
University, principal of the Confucius Institute there, and an executive member
of the Association of Japanese-Chinese Contrastive Linguistics. His major works
include Deep Choice of Culture: The
Theory of Chinese Paratactic Grammar (Jilin Education Publishing House,
1994), On Chinese
Paratactic Grammar: A Construction Based on Types of Cognition and Logic of
Language (Hakuteisha Publishing, 2012) and Selected Papers on Studies of Modern Chinese Grammar in Japan (co-editor, BLCUP, 2007).