Uncertainty in the Empire of Routine

The Administrative Revolution of the Eighteenth-Century Qing State

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Uncertainty in the Empire of Routine investigates the administrative revolution of China’s eighteenth-century Qing state. It begins in the mid-seventeenth century with what seemed, at the time, to be straightforward policies to clean up the bureaucracy: a regulation about deadlines here, a requirement about reporting standards there. Over the course of a hundred years, the central court continued to demand more information from the provinces about local administrative activities. By the middle of the eighteenth century, unprecedented amounts of data about local offices throughout the empire existed.

The result of this information coup was a growing discourse of crisis and decline. Gathering data to ensure that officials were doing their jobs properly, it turned out, repeatedly exposed new issues requiring new forms of scrutiny. Slowly but surely, the thicket of imperial routines and standards binding together local offices, provincial superiors, and central ministries shifted the very epistemological foundations of the state. A vicious cycle arose whereby reporting protocols implemented to solve problems uncovered more problems, necessitating the collection of more information. At the very moment that the Qing knew more about itself than ever before, the central court became certain that it had entered an age of decline.

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E-Book (PDF)
Early Qing Legal Institutions
Justice and Discipline in the Conquered Empire
Pages: 27–56
Beyond Fact
The Centrally Reviewed Case as Process and Genre
Pages: 57–102
Imperial Routines in the Local Archive
Synchronization and Scrutiny in the Yongzheng Era
Pages: 103–149
Ruling the Empire of Routine
The Case-ification of the Imperial Bureaucracy
Pages: 151–187
When the Problem Is the Solution
The Extraordinary Trouble with Pursuing Certainty
Pages: 188–225
The Anxious State
Pages: 226–236
Works Cited
Pages: 239–249
Index
Pages: 251–262
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