Porcelain for the Emperor

Manufacture and Technocracy in Qing China

Kai Jun Chen author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:University of Washington Press

Published:28th Mar '23

Should be back in stock very soon

Porcelain for the Emperor cover

A new perspective for understanding the technology behind goods "made in China"

The exquisite ceramic ware produced at the Imperial Porcelain Manufactory at Jingdezhen in southern China functioned as a kind of visual propaganda for the Qing dynasty (1644–1911) court. Porcelain for the Emperor charts the career of bannerman Tang Ying, a technocrat in the porcelain industry, through the first half of the eighteenth century to uncover the wider role of specialist officials in producing the technological knowledge and distinctive artistic forms that were essential to cultural policies of the Chinese state. Through fiscal management, technical experimentation, and design, these imperial technocrats facilitated rationalized manufacturing in precapitalist and preindustrial society.

Drawing on museum collections and firsthand archaeological evidence, as well as the voluminous Archive of the Imperial Workshops, this book contributes new insights to scholarship on global empires and the history of science and technology in China. Readers will learn how the imperial state's intervention in industry left a lingering imprint on modern China through its modes of labor-intensive production, the division of domestic and foreign markets, and, above all, a technocratic culture of centralization.

"Porcelain for the Emperor is a truly admirable example of interdisciplinary scholarship. Drawing upon concepts and methods from the fields of science and technology studies, literary criticism, and art history, it illuminates the heretofore neglected contributions of bannermen technocrats to the Qing imperial project. This compact and handsomely produced monograph will interest not only art historians, porcelain connoisseurs, and museum curators, but also students of early modern material and political cultures, court history, and imperial state-formations."

(Journal of Chinese History)

"In Porcelain for the Emperor, Kai Jun Chen forensically follows the official story of commissioning, producing, and supplying court porcelain, using the Archives of the Imperial Workshops. He has combined this rigorous investigation of texts with a close examination of a large sample of the surviving material culture relating to Tang Ying's ceramic production."

(Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS))

"Fascinating . . . The book is a great achievement and reads well."

(Oriental Ceramic Society Newsletter)

"[R]ichly illustrated and lucidly written. . . . Chen's fine-grained study will substantially deepen our understanding of not only the history of science and technology and the history of material and visual culture in early modern China but also global histories of imperial knowledge formation and empire building from the stimulating perspective of technocracy."

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ISBN: 9780295750828

Dimensions: 254mm x 178mm x 25mm

Weight: 680g

277 pages