David Mungello's work, while drawing on important publications by pioneers such as Knud Lundbaek, does at last give us a convenient synopsis of the career of a man whose breadth of reading in Chinese was probably over a century ahead of anyone else in the West. For that alone he surely does deserve to be remembered, and for ensuring that David Mungello certainly deserves our thanks.
* Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies *
Through these five chapters Mungello gives an intimate, almost encyclopedic overview of the fate of Pre mare and of Figurism. He paints a picture of a fervent missionary and scholar. This work is concise and gives an excellent overview of the history of Figurism along the red thread of Pre mare's life and work in China and its ultimate failure to save the China mission. . . Mungello also makes a beautiful statement on academic freedom, even though, or maybe because, Pre mare's thoughts were radical and possibly heretical: no one deserves to be silenced.
* International Review Of Mission *
M. performs a great service not only to sinologists but also to a broader readership, especially Catholics, by retrieving this little-known chapter of Catholic missions in China. In hindsight, the silencing of Pre mare was a terrible injustice to this scholarly and saintly Jesuit, whose sole goal in elaborating Figurisme was to facilitate the con- version of the Chinese to Christianity by showing that God was already present at the beginning of their history and has revealed himself to their ancestors. May Pre mare's story provide a cautionary tale to contemporary church leaders, especially in Asia, not to fail to discern God's hidden presence among their people, and not to silence those who try to point to it.
* Theological Studies *
Mungello's erudition and fine prose make this investigation of a most remarkable chapter of the history of the Christian mission in East Asia an inspiring and much-recommended read.
* Religious Studies Review *
This book is a major contribution to a fascinating aspect of the Jesuit mission in China. Premare's is a tragic story, and it is well told here, with compelling examples of his 'discovery' in the Chinese classics of prefigurations of Christian Revelation. However ultimately misguided his claims may have been, the author establishes beyond any possible doubt Premare's encyclopedic knowledge of Chinese language and culture, and his devoted sincerity of purpose. -- Jonathan Chaves, professor of Chinese, The George Washington University
Never before has interest in the Jesuit enterprise in China been been more acute, and D. E. Mungello's study of the Jesuit Figurist, Joseph de Premare, is among the most insightful and informed studies now available. This remarkable work on one of the progenitors of modern Sinology will receive wide acclaim. -- Anthony E. Clark, Whitworth University
...[G]iven that David Mungello has spent more than four decades engaged in the study of Pre mare and the environment in which he operated, there is clearly no one better placed today to take up the cudgels on his behalf.... David Mungello's work, while drawing on important publications by pioneers such as Knud Lundbaek, does at last give us a convenient synopsis of the career of a man whose breadth of reading in Chinese was probably over a century ahead of anyone else in the West. For that alone he surely does deserve to be remembered, and for ensuring that David Mungello certainly deserves our thanks.
* Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies *