A Political Life in Ming China

A Grand Secretary and His Times

By (author) John W. Dardess University of Kansas

Hardback - £98.00

Publication date:

25 September 2013

Length of book:

220 pages

Publisher

Rowman & Littlefield Publishers

Dimensions:

235x161mm
6x9"

ISBN-13: 9781442223776

This fascinating history uncovers the hidden political world of Ming China, exploring how the most powerful man in mid-sixteenth-century China steered the empire through the worst crises it had ever faced. Distinguished scholar John W. Dardess traces the life of Chief Grand Secretary Xu Jie (1503–1583), the leading politician-statesman in the China of his time. Drawing on years of research, Dardess uses Xu Jie’s extensive letters to officials in the field and reports of conversations with the emperors he served to show just how difficult it was to defend the empire. His correspondence vividly shows how he organized its defenses and shepherded it through the twin crises of raids along the thousands of miles of continental and maritime frontiers in the 1550s and 1560s. The book traces his origins, his rise to power, and his engagement with the leading Confucian school of his time, that of Wang Yangming and his electrifying ethical teachings. Dardess describes how Xu used those teachings to build a following and leverage his way up the Ming bureaucracy. He shows how Xu was able both to suppress corruption and liberalize bureaucratic procedures. At the same time, the book highlights the psychological strain Xu suffered as a result and the vindictive and nearly lethal attacks directed at him after his retirement. Arguing that Xu was instrumental to the survival of the Ming dynasty through a long period of severe stress, Dardess tells his long-neglected story in rich and engrossing detail.
Jonh Dardess, a leading scholar and retired septuagenarian in the field of Sinology, manages to vividly sketch the inner workings of the Ming imperial bureaucracy. . . .Dardess' biography does successfully present Xu Jie as a microcosm of the Ming Empire, and here the scholarly work thoroughly delivers on the promises of new biography and its interest in the interplay between institutional structure and individual agency. . . .It should be considered required reading for those wanting to come close to grasping how the oft-vaunted bureaucracies of Chinese empires functioned in real life. . . .[T]his is a fine monograph that is both highly readable and able to immerse a 21st century reader in a top-level bureaucrat's inner world situated in the culturally very different political constellation of sixteenth-century China.