Protest with Chinese Characteristics: Demonstrations, Riots, and Petitions in the Mid-Qing Dynasty

Protest with Chinese Characteristics: Demonstrations, Riots, and Petitions in the Mid-Qing Dynasty

by Ho-fung Hung
Protest with Chinese Characteristics: Demonstrations, Riots, and Petitions in the Mid-Qing Dynasty

Protest with Chinese Characteristics: Demonstrations, Riots, and Petitions in the Mid-Qing Dynasty

by Ho-fung Hung

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Overview

The origin of political modernity has long been tied to the Western history of protest and revolution, the currents of which many believe sparked popular dissent worldwide. Reviewing nearly one thousand instances of protest in China from the eighteenth to the early-nineteenth centuries, Ho-fung Hung charts an evolution of Chinese dissent that stands apart from Western trends.

Hung samples from mid-Qing petitions and humble plaints to the emperor. He revisits rallies, riots, market strikes, and other forms of contention rarely considered in previous studies. Drawing on new world history, which accommodates parallels and divergences between political-economic and cultural developments East and West, Hung shows how the centralization of political power and an expanding market, coupled with a persistent Confucianist orthodoxy, shaped protesters' strategies and appeals in Qing China.

This unique form of mid-Qing protest combined a quest for justice and autonomy with a filial-loyal respect for the imperial center, and Hung's careful research ties this distinct characteristic to popular protest in China today. As Hung makes clear, the nature of these protests prove late imperial China was anything but a stagnant and tranquil empire before the West cracked it open. In fact, the origins of modern popular politics in China predate the 1911 Revolution. Hung's work ultimately establishes a framework others can use to compare popular protest among different cultural fabrics. His book fundamentally recasts the evolution of such acts worldwide.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780231525459
Publisher: Columbia University Press
Publication date: 05/31/2011
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 288
File size: 9 MB

About the Author

Ho-fung Hung is associate professor of sociology at the Johns Hopkins University and the editor of China and the Transformation of Global Capitalism.

Table of Contents

List of Figures
List of Tables
Illustrations of Chinese Protest from Qing Times to Present
Preface
Introduction
Chapter 1. Market Expansion, State Centralization, and Neo-Confucianism in Qing China
Chapter 2. Documenting the Three Waves of Mid-Qing Protest
Chapter 3. Filial-Loyal Demonstrations, 1740–1759
Chapter 4. Riots Into Rebellion, 1776–1795
Chapter 5. Resistance and Petitions, 1820–1839
Chapter 6. Mid-Qing Protests in Comparative Perspective
Epilogue. The Past in the Present
Notes
References
Index

What People are Saying About This

Guobin Yang

This is an excellent book, carefully researched, well argued, and well written, and it makes important contributions to the field. Protest with Chinese Characteristics is original and theoretically provocative, and I am not aware of any other book that has done the same work.

Jack A. Goldstone

Ho-fung Hung's book is for early modern China what Charles Tilly's Vendee was for early modern France—a pathbreaking, quantitative study of political protest and the social conditions behind it. Hung demonstrates that the evolution of popular protest in China did not simply recapitulate that of Western Europe; his detailed archival research shows that Chinese society for centuries wrestled with its own unique concepts of state/market and peasant/worker/state relationships, independent of Western influence. This landmark study will change the way we view protest in China, from imperial times to the present day.

R. Bin Wong

This engaging effort to explain the characteristics of three kinds of Chinese social protest across a century when the empire moved from effective government, some economic prosperity, and general social stability to a period of reduced government capacities, economic difficulties, and growing social unrest should be welcomed by all students of collective action.

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