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Death by a Thousand Cuts [Hardcover]

Timothy Brook (Author), Jérôme Bourgon (Author), Gregory Blue (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)

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Book Description

March 15, 2008 0674027736 978-0674027732 1

In a public square in Beijing in 1904, multiple murderer Wang Weiqin was executed before a crowd of onlookers. He was among the last to suffer the extreme punishment known as lingchi. Called by Western observers “death by a thousand cuts” or “death by slicing,” this penalty was reserved for the very worst crimes in imperial China.

A unique interdisciplinary history, Death by a Thousand Cuts is the first book to explore the history, iconography, and legal contexts of Chinese tortures and executions from the tenth century until lingchi’s abolition in 1905. The authors then turn their attention to an in-depth investigation of “oriental” tortures in the Western imagination. While early modern Europeans often depicted Chinese institutions as rational, nineteenth- and twentieth-century readers consumed pictures of lingchi executions as titillating curiosities and evidence of moral inferiority. By examining these works in light of European conventions associated with despotic government, Christian martyrdom, and ecstatic suffering, the authors unpack the stereotype of innate Chinese cruelty and explore the mixture of fascination and revulsion that has long characterized the West’s encounter with “other” civilizations.

Compelling and thought-provoking, Death by a Thousand Cuts questions the logic by which states justify tormenting individuals and the varied ways by which human beings have exploited the symbolism of bodily degradation for political aims.

(20080709)

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Death by a Thousand Cuts + True Crimes in Eighteenth-Century China: Twenty Case Histories (Asian Law Series) + Writing and Law in Late Imperial China: Crime, Conflict, and Judgment (Asian Law)
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Editorial Reviews

Review

An ambitious, important book that will stimulate wide reflection. The authors explore the most infamous of Chinese tortures, tracing the ways in which the concept of 'death by a thousand cuts' took on a life of its own in European discourse about China, as well as in China's discourse about itself. Not the least of the book's virtues is the way it dismantles hasty judgments and received ideas about Chinese culture, ideas that leak from past to present, from the judicial realm to other areas of human activity. Its interdisciplinary reach and the brio with which it is carried out are remarkable.
--Haun Saussy, author of Great Walls of Discourse and Other Adventures in Cultural China (20080426)

This original and ambitious work reaches out to a wide audience. It aims to explain the general position of 'torture' in the Chinese legal system and the specific roles of the extreme punishment known as lingchi, 'death by slicing,' in Chinese political practice. The authors draw on an impressive range of materials as well as an unusual variety of visual images to situate the practice of lingchi in Chinese history, world history, and Western imaginations. The book is revelatory on Georges Bataille's uncertain role in his famous work presenting Chinese death by slicing amidst European practices. The reconstruction of the history of the lingchi practice itself is nuanced and judicious.
--R. Bin Wong, author of China Transformed: Historical Change and the Limits of European Experience (20080508)

In 1904, a French photographer documented the Chinese practice of lingchi, a form of execution that involved slicing off limbs and pieces of flesh. Europeans recoiled from what appeared to be a gruesome, lingering death, citing it as evidence of a uniquely Oriental ruthlessness. This fascinating study argues, however, that lingchi was not entirely about physical suffering--the victim was typically sedated with opium, and killed early in the process--but about a "loss of somatic integrity," the posthumous shame of having been reduced to body parts. Crimes that merited lingchi ranged from killing a paternal grandparent to, in at least one case, cheating on taxes. Throughout, the authors do their best to downplay the exoticism of their subject, pointing to such Western practices as drawing (disembowelling) and quartering (dismembering): "It is hard to see much distinction in degrees of cruelty." (New Yorker 20080817)

I highly recommend Death by a Thousand Cuts as a book that offers a broad introduction to a history and a culture by concentrating on a single subject.
--Steve Noyes (Vancouver Sun 20081101)

The authors present a nuanced picture of state-imposed execution and, without at any time condoning, succeed in their goal of contextualizing lingchi in relation to Western forms of punishment, noting the availability of the death penalty for a variety of relatively trivial offences in 18th-century England, as well as the appalling conditions that prevailed on prison ships that sailed from England to Australia...At a time when the debate about what constitutes acceptable forms of physical punishment, as well as the thorny question of a divergence between Western and Asian concepts of human rights, is so prevalent, this challenging and important work will appeal not solely to Sinologists, but to legal historians and students of visual representation.
--Julian Ward (Times Higher Education Supplement 20090227)

[This book is] a rude awakening to jolt us from the overused numbness and put us face to face with the origin of the phrase, the torture of lingchi. Because history has been sanitized by countless retellings of television drama and simplified texts, the practice of torture is often misunderstood, even by those of us who thought we knew such things. In this notable book, the authors delve into historical archives to produce documents, photos and analyses that are more nuanced than a Hong Kong movie of torture fest, such as the legendary Chinese Torture Chamber Story. Approached by a Western perspective, the authors debunk the traditional Western notion that ruthless executions were rooted in the Chinese culture. Yet, the details they use are not for the faint of heart.
--Raymond Zhou (China Daily )

Foucault's work explicitly informs Death by a Thousand Cuts but the purpose of this new book is different from that of the French philosopher. This fascinating and necessarily appalling study describes how photographs of the executed man were circulated by French soldiers and other westerners in the imperial capital and the images added to others of "oriental despotism." Be warned: this is a close reading of lingchi and its significance, which means it contains plenty of toe-curling descriptions of slicing flesh and gougings. Not for the faint-hearted, it offers an engaging insight into the way China's highest legal punishment came to feed into western notions of imperial China as a cruel society.
--Clifford Coonan (South China Post )

This is a learned and educational book.
--Jonathan Mirsky (Literary Review )

This elegant and innovatively transnational book is intent on restoring lingchi to the legal, moral, and political context in which it made some kind of sense--this is a history of violence that refuses to take the place of pain and violence in human life as timeless...With judicious analysis, imaginative reconstructions from difficult and sparse sources, and a compelling sense of injustice driving it all, the book is gripping.
--Priya Satia (Times Literary Supplement )

About the Author

Timothy Brook is Professor of History at the University of British Columbia.

Jérôme Bourgon is Researcher at the Institut d’Asie Orientale / Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, Lyon.

Gregory Blue is Associate Professor of History, University of Victoria.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 336 pages
  • Publisher: Harvard University Press; 1 edition (March 15, 2008)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0674027736
  • ISBN-13: 978-0674027732
  • Product Dimensions: 9.2 x 6.5 x 1.4 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.4 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,214,027 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Profound, disturbing, and enlightening, January 8, 2009
By 
glamaFez (Kansas City, MO USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Death by a Thousand Cuts (Hardcover)
This book is one of the finest examples of scholarship that I've seen.

I can't add much beyond an enthusiastic recommendation to those interested in the history of captial punishment, torture, and their intersection.

The book thoroughly de-sensationalizes the subject matter. The reader will experience horror at descriptions of lingchi and other punishments, and an enhanced awareness of captial punishment within and outside the world's legal systems.

Lingchi was intended to destroy the victm's afterlife, in addition to causing temporary torment and discouraging captial crimes. No holds are barred in presenting past augmentations of this and other punishments for the purpose of sheer cruelty. An emphasis on lingchi as a legal phenomenon is the main focus of the book, but I was left with both a tragic sense of what can happen outside law and a better feeling about progress within law during the past century.
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