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History has many untold stories. In Rats, Cats, Rogues, and Heroes the author provides glimpses into China’s hidden past through the native’s point of view. Rather than simply writing about ordinary people, this book is written from the perspective of ordinary people, how they told their own stories about themselves, their communities, and their pasts. The author examines historical consciousness as revealed in people’s everyday lives and as expressed through customary rituals, sociocultural conventions, language, and the complex symbolism of common human experiences. The focus is on ethnic groups and individuals who have been routinely discriminated against in mainstream society and treated by officials as rogues and criminals. They were denizens of the underworld of “rivers and lakes” (jianghu), a sociocultural category that includes bandits, sorcerers, conmen, and prostitutes. To get at their silent history the author spent decades conducting field research in rural areas of southern China, collecting rarely used unconventional sources—folklore, legends, myths, rumors, and hearsay—that reveal nuggets of new information and insights not found in the conventional sources in libraries and archives. This book challenges many commonplace assumptions about how academics write history by offering alternative possibilities for China’s past.
Published | Jan 31 2023 |
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Format | Paperback |
Edition | 1st |
Extent | 344 |
ISBN | 9781538169339 |
Imprint | Rowman & Littlefield Publishers |
Illustrations | 37 b/w illustrations;2 tables |
Dimensions | 221 x 156 mm |
Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
Robert Antony's new book, Rats, Cats, Rogues, and Heroes, is a welcomed addition to the historical literature on the waterways and coastal subcultures of south China. Antony uncovers aspects of ordinary people's lives that dynastic histories ignore, including the trials and tribulations of business and commerce on the edge of empire.
James L. Watson, Harvard University
China’s historical record is dominated by sources written by a tiny group of highly educated Chinese men. Even when historians have tried to write about less elite groups, their work has been unable to escape this elitist perspective. In this book Robert Antony successfully breaks through the porcelain ceiling that is formed by these elite sources of classical Chinese history by descending deep into the sea of local sources and oral histories. When we use these sources in order to peel away the prejudices of the political elite in the established literature, the marginal people studied by Antony reveal themselves to be made of flesh and blood, no better and no worse than the elites who despise them. It is only the brush of the powerful that has made those of the past into rogues and criminals, and one can only hope that more historians like Antony will take the trouble to study these groups in an anthropological approach. And I use the word “trouble” on purpose since it does take an effort to travel the countryside and find these sources tucked away in the land and waterscape.
Barend J. ter Haar, University of Hamburg
Wizards, python robes, and “bad books”—Robert Antony’s remarkably entertaining study reveals the seedy world of danger lurking below the staid surface of social control. If you want to understand why generations of China's rulers seem to fear their own people, read this book.
Thomas David DuBois, Beijing Normal University
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