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Social Power and Legal Culture - Litigation Masters in Late Imperial China (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R2,604
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Social Power and Legal Culture - Litigation Masters in Late Imperial China (Hardcover)
Series: Law, Society, and Culture in China
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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Asserting that litigation in late imperial China was a form of
documentary warfare, this book offers a social analysis of the men
who composed legal documents for commoners and elites alike.
Litigation masters--a broad category of legal facilitators ranging
from professional plaintmasters to simple but literate men to whom
people turned for assistance--emerge in this study as central
players in many of the most scandalous cases in eighteenth- and
nineteenth-century China. These cases reveal the power of scandal
to shape entire categories of law in the popular and official
imaginations.
The author characterizes litigation masters as entrepreneurs of
power, intermediaries who typically emerge in the process of
limited state expansion to provide links between local interests
and the infrastructure of the state. These powermongers routinely
acted in the interests of the local elite and the male lineage. But
cases preserved in criminal archives also reveal a clientele
surprisingly composed of the subordinate actors in legal
disputes--widows fighting in-laws and other men, debtors contesting
creditors, younger brothers disputing older ones, and common people
charging the rich. Challenging earlier scholarship claiming that
the Chinese legal system simply maintained the hegemony of elites
and the patriarchal order, this study shows how the legal tools of
domination were often transformed into weapons of social resistance
and revenge.
The book also examines the manifold ways in which legal practice,
Confucian ideology, and popular entertainments like opera and
storytelling coalesced into Chinese legal culture. Popular
traditions in particular did not simply reflect legal culture but
actively influenced it, shaping common presumptions about law that
transcended differences of class and region. Exploring Chinese
legal culture in the structural contexts of commercialization,
changes in property transactions, and ineradicable litigation
backlogs, the author explains why litigation was condemned by all
classes of Chinese men and women even as all classes litigated.
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