Abstract
In the early nineteenth century, the London Missionary Society (LMS) established missionary outposts and printing presses in Southeast Asia, publishing a number of scientific periodicals and books, which subsequently informed the preaching policy on the Chinese mainland. The motivation and discursive strategies of the LMS’s dissemination of scientific knowledge in Southeast Asia are worthy of in-depth investigation. This study employs the socio-cognitive discourse analysis approach to investigate the mental model and discursive strategies of LMS’s two representative scientific publications in Southeast Asia, namely the Chinese Monthly Magazine and Memoir of Things Seen and Heard by Travelling West around the World, thus providing insights into the rationale behind the scientific discourse of Protestant missionaries in nineteenth-century China. It is found that the scientific discourse of the LMS in Southeast Asia was to modify the comprehension of world formation held by local Chinese migrants, thereby influencing their perception of European scientific strength and Christian belief. This study is an interdisciplinary investigation of Protestant history in Southeast Asia, and the methodology of critical discourse analysis offers a new way of explaining history, which complements the conventional historical analysis.
Published Version
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