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The Kongs of Qufu : the descendants of Confucius in late Imperial China / Christopher S. Agnew.

Van Pelt Library DS797.72.Q487 A46 2019
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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Agnew, Christopher S., 1976- author.
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Confucius--Family.
Confucius.
Kinship.
Nobility.
Families.
Qufu Shi (China)--History.
Qufu Shi (China).
Qufu Shi (China)--Politics and government.
Qufu Shi (China)--Social conditions.
Nobility--China--Qufu Shi.
Kinship--China--Qufu Shi.
China--History--960-1644.
China.
History.
China--History--Qing dynasty, 1644-1912.
Politics and government.
Qing Dynasty (China).
Social conditions.
China--Qufu Shi.
Genre:
History.
Physical Description:
xi, 241 pages ; 23 cm
Place of Publication:
Seattle : University of Washington Press, [2019]
Summary:
"The city of Qufu in north China's Shandong Province is famous as the hometown of Kong Qiu (551-479 BCE)--known in English as Confucius, and in Chinese as Kongzi or Kong Fuzi--and the site of his tomb and temple. Serving the Sage traces the history of the direct descendants of Confucius from the inception of the hereditary title Dukes for Fulfilling the Sage in 1055 through its dissolution in 1935, after the fall of China's dynastic system in 1911. The Kongs' administrative record, the largest such family archive in China, documents the history of northern Chinese agriculture, market formation, rural violence, and rent resistance. Serving the Sage draws on this rich material to address key themes in Chinese social history, such as agricultural commercialization, the structure and function of periodic marketing systems, and the impact of rural violence on political destabilization and social upheavals. The picture that emerges is that of a kinship group descended from Confucius and ruled by a hereditary duke that mobilized substantial and often coercive forces to manage agricultural labor, dominate rural markets, and profit from commercial enterprises. The book also examines how genealogies and ritual texts, through their performance and circulation, reproduced a model of kinship organization that reinforced ducal power. Elites shaped cultural practice and collective memory, while competing with state and popular interests. Confucian ritual was at once a means to reproduce existing social hierarchies and a potential site of conflict and subversion"-- Provided by publisher.
Contents:
Inventing the Dukedom
Estate expansion and ducal power
Savage tigers
The Duke and the Magistrate
Inscribing the past
Ritual and power
The fall of Imperial China and the end of the Dukedom.
Notes:
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Other Format:
Online version: Agnew, Christopher S., 1976- Kongs of Qufu.
ISBN:
9780295745923
0295745924
9780295745930
0295745932
OCLC:
1083181776

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