Bradly W. Reed (白德瑞) is Assistant Professor of History at the University of Virginia.
Education
B.A. University of Oregon 1980
M.A. University of Washington 1989
Ph.D. UCLA 1994
Publications, Awards, and Activities
Talons and Teeth, County Clerks and Runners in the Qing Dynasty, Stanford University Press, 2000
"Gentry Activism in Nineteenth-Century Sichuan: The Three Fees Bureau," Late Imperial China, 20:2 (December 1999): 99-127
"Shincho koki shisen ni okeru shu zei, saizei, sozei dain ," (informal administrative financing and tax collection in 19th-century Sichuan, a report from Ba County), Chu goku Shakai to Bunka (Chinese society and culture), Association for Studies of Chinese Society and Culture, University of Tokyo, no. 13 1998
"Money and Justice: Clerks, Runners, and the Magistrate's Court in Late Imperial Sichuan," Modern China 21:3 (July) 1995.
Committee on Scholarly Communications with China, National Academy of Sciences, Research Fellowship, 1991-93.
National Resource Fellowships, 1987, 1988.
For commoners in the Qing dynasty, the most salient agents of the imperial state were not the emperor’s appointed officials but rather the clerks and runners of the county yamen, the lowest level of functionaries in the Qing state’s administrative hierarchy. Yet until now we have known very little about these critically important persons beyond the caricatured portrayals of corruption and venality left by Qing high officials and elites.
Drawing from the rich archival records of Ba county, Sichuan, the author challenges the simplicity of these portrayals by taking us inside the county yamen to provide the first detailed look at local administrative practice from the perspective of those who actually carried it out. Who were the county clerks and runners? How were they recruited, organized, disciplined, and rewarded? What was the economic basis for a career in the yamen? How did clerks and runners view themselves as well as legitimize their role in Qing government? And what impact did their interests and practices have on symbolically laden elements of imperial government such as the magistrate’s court?
In addressing these questions, the author traverses the disjuncture between statutory regulations and the realities of daily administrative practice, uncovering a realm of informal, semiautonomous, yet highly structured and even rationalized procedures. Although frequently in violation of formal law, this extra-statutory system nevertheless remained an irreducible component of local government under the Qing. Recognizing the centrality of such informal practice to yamen administration forces us to rethink not only traditional assumptions concerning local corruption in the Qing, but also the ways in which we conceptualize the boundaries between state and society in late imperial China.
發表於2024-12-22
Talons and Teeth 2024 pdf epub mobi 電子書 下載
圖書標籤: 清史 法律史與法律文化 白德瑞 巴縣 社會史 海外中國研究 清 明清史
非常優秀的博士論文瞭. 可以學習的是如何處理儒傢的意識形態在各方角力和行政過程的作用, 比如對衙役的偏見可以視為gentry對國傢權力的不滿; informal and extrastatutory practice 延續瞭Philip Huang的理論架構。我對他反復用的“rational practice”抱有疑惑,到底什麼行為纔是rational的?
評分law and local society
評分law and local society
評分翻過
評分翻過
Talons and Teeth 2024 pdf epub mobi 電子書 下載