Confucian Image Politics
豆瓣
Masculine Morality in Seventeenth-Century China
简介
During the Ming-Qing transition (roughly from the 1570s to the 1680s), literati-officials in China employed public forms of writing, art, and social spectacle to present positive moral images of themselves and negative images of their rivals. The rise of print culture, the dynastic change, and the proliferating approaches to Confucian moral cultivation together gave shape to this new political culture. Confucian Image Politics considers the moral images of officials-as fathers, sons, husbands, and friends-circulated in a variety of media inside and outside the court. It shows how power negotiations took place through participants' invocations of Confucian ethical ideals in political attacks, self-expression, self-defense, discussion of politically sensitive issues, and literati community rebuilding after the dynastic change. This first book-length study of early modern Chinese politics from the perspective of critical men's history shows how images-the Donglin official, the Fushe scholar, the turncoat figure-were created, circulated, and contested to serve political purposes.
目录
Preface and Acknowledgments ix
Ming-Qing Reign Periods xv
Introduction 3
PART I. THE LATE MING
1. Lists, Literature, and the Imagined Community
of Factionalists: The Donglin 27
2. Displaying Sincerity: The Fushe 69
3. A Zhongxiao Celebrity: Huang Daozhou (1585-1646) 102
Interlude: A Moral Tale of Two Cities, 1644-1645:
Beijing and Nanjing 129
PART II. THE EARLY QING
4. Moralizing, the Qing Way 157
5. Conquest, Continuity, and the Loyal Turncoat 186
Conclusion 213
Glossary 221
List of Abbreviations 229
Notes 231
Bibliography 273
Index 299