Policing and punishment in China : from patriarchy to "the people" / Michael R. Dutton.
1992
HV8260.A2 D87 1992 (Map It)
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Details
Author
Title
Policing and punishment in China : from patriarchy to "the people" / Michael R. Dutton.
Published
Cambridge ; New York : Cambridge University Press, 1992.
Printed
[1994]
Call Number
HV8260.A2 D87 1992
ISBN
052140097X
Description
xii, 391 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm
System Control No.
(OCoLC)24009440
Summary
This book traces the transition in the regimes of regulation and punishment of all social levels from late imperial to modern China, an area long neglected in Chinese studies. The book is particularly significant for its theoretical framework; it is not a simple narrative history of policing but, rather, draws on Michel Foucault's theoretical work on governmentality, punishment and control, using his genealogical method to construct a 'history of the present'. Whilst most Chinese Marxist accounts of history have assumed the sublimation of past as a precondition for present, Dr. Dutton illustrates that 'feudal remnants' play a part in the social regulation of contemporary China. Although the regime of punishment is no longer dominated by the physical, the psychology of that system remains: today, the file rather than the body is marked. China was the first nation to use statistical records as a basis by which to plot and police its people, and contemporary Chinese institutions for policing rely heavily on the maintenance of traditional notions of community mutuality. The current regime centres on work and production, rather than on the family and Confucian ethics, and is by no means a new version of traditional dynasties. Rather, its form of policing and modes of regulation have resonances of past. The transition that has occurred, therefore, has been from patriarchy to 'the people'. The first section of the book deals with mechanisms of surveillance from within the collective, particularly traditional modes of policing households, which were dependent on the centrality of family in Confucian notions of state. The following section discusses the emergence of prisons and the failure of modern Western penal systems in China, mainly because of their incompatibility with the notion of an individual subject. Section three analyses the household registration systems of the post-liberation period, concluding that they did not constitute reintroduction of the feudal system but were, in fact, similar to the Soviet system of labour registration. The final section discusses the other side of the ordered society; that is, reform through labour programmes and the notion of the prison as factory producing a clash of proletarians from within the Gulag.
Note
"Reprinted 1994"--Title page verso.
Bibliography, etc. Note
Includes bibliographical references (pages 361-380) and index.
Record Appears in
Table of Contents
List of figures
Author's note
Ch. 1Repetition of the old, emergence of the new: social regulation and punishment in China
1
The 'feudal remnants' debate
6
An alternative to the 'feudal remnants' method
12
Sect. I
The Policing of Virtue
19
Ch. 2The policing of households: the meaning of filial duty
21
Household registration and European discourses
33
Chinese household registration: a flexible technology
38
Registration as a harbinger of the modern?
40
Marxist and Wittfogelian views of the state
43
Feudal concession or ruling-class repression?
46
Some problems with total state theories
49
Conclusion
49
Ch. 3Toward a history of Chinese registration
55
Toward a history of registration
56
The Tang dynasty register
57
The Song dynasty register
63
The Yuan dynasty register
67
The household register in the Ming and Qing dynasties
69
The village pacts
70
Surveillance, control and punishment in the village pact
73
Patriarchal punishments and the place of the state
79
The 'positivities' of mutuality
84
Baojia: a technology of negotiation
85
Conclusion
88
Sect. II
The Penal Regime
95
Ch. 4From the policing of virtue to the policing of pain: early forms of punishment in China
97
Definitions of the prison
106
The family as the object of punishment
109
The secular nature of Chinese law
111
The precision necessary in the production of truth
114
Legal precision and the prison
117
The strengthening of specifications of difference
119
Regulatory mechanisms and mutuality in the patriarchalist punishments of the Sui-Tang period
122
Some problems in the theorization of the prison
128
Prisons in the Song dynasty
131
Punishment and regulation in the Ming
134
Some problems in the construction of a genealogy of the prison
140
The production of an Orientalist discourse of the East
142
Conclusion
144
Ch. 5
From the policing of pain to the economy of discipline: punishment in the modern period
151
The emergence of the modern prison and the individualized disciplinary subject
157
The architectural forms of the modern prison
160
The emergence of the individualized disciplinary subject
163
The architectural as a means of surveillance
167
The Beijing model prison
168
Shifting regimes of punishment
171
A new regime of policing
175
Re-emergence of past practices
178
The yiken system of the Republican period
178
The maintenance of Western systems
182
Conclusion
183
Sect. III
The Policing of Households, the Policing of Work
187
Ch. 6The emergence of the hukou
189
The decline of baojia and the emergence of the hukou
191
The emergence of socialist planning
195
Chinese and Soviet systems of registration
203
Local policing in the PRC
214
Local committees and registration in the PRC
214
Personnel file system and registration
222
The register and socialism
226
'Collectivities'
233
Conclusion
236
Sect. IV
On Useful Timber
247
Ch. 7Securing the perimeter
249
On useful timber: the role of the family
253
'Mobilize the power of relatives and family to bring about reform'
258
Truth, science and the masses
262
Relying upon the masses
268
The 'positivities' of planning
270
The emergence of the plan: the beginnings of reform through labour?
272
The negative side-effects of planning
273
Popular will versus the expert
278
Past practices and socialist mediation
280
Comparative communist studies and Chinese penal practices: why the difference?
282
Problems with internal regulation
283
Conclusion
285
Ch. 8Gulags and utopias
291
A question of heritage
292
A theory of productive forces?
295
Disciplinary projects
301
Classification, discipline and control: entering the prison
304
Internment and the initial education process
305
Classification, discipline and control: the formation and government of the team
308
The reordering of the body
311
The ornamentation of the body, the transformation of the mind
312
Education
314
Sect. V
A Return to the Social
323
Ch. 9The spread of the 'carceral'?
325
The new conditions of crime engendered by reform
327
The recidivist and transient criminal
327
Technologies of policing in need of reform: the role of the register and the security committee
330
Conclusion
339
Ch. 10
Conclusion
347
Glossary
355
Selected bibliography
361
Index
381