"His work focuses on addressing the disconnect between state-level demands and local-level events through the analysis of the appointment of and actions by governors, thereby creating a richer and much more detailed explanation of Qing governance . . ."
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Mathew Brundage, IIAS Newsletter
"The Qing court is clearly laid out horizontally and vertically, showing how the emperors met the demands of each particular province, and how changes were made over time. Guy has thus provided a three-dimensional picture of the provincial government."
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Ulrich Theobald, International Journal of Asian Studies
"A treasure trove of information not only about the provincial bureaucracy, but also about the different regional histories in the first half of Qing rule."
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Andrea Janku, Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies
"This book immediately establishes itself as one of the foundational works in the curriculum of Qing history, and should be ready by all students of that subject at the earliest opportunity."
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William T. Rowe, Frontiers of History in China
"Through meticulous research . . . Guy grapples with the major tensions that criss-crossed the early Qing state . . . There is enough insight in these pages to satisfy even the most demanding Qing political junkie."
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Mark C. Elliott, The Journal of Asian Studies
"Kent Guy's institutional study of the Qing governors is an exceptionally fine work, characterized by clarity of analysis and presentation and by depth and breadth of research."
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Jane Kate Leonard, China Review International
"Careful scholarship and graceful prose mark this deep analysis of the administrative system of one of the most effective dynastic regimes in history. . . . Indispensible for historians of the Qing, this book should also be read by political scientists interested in contemporary Chinese governance and comparative imperial administration. Summing up: Essential."
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Choice
"For specialists the book is a mine of information and a reminder of the scale and magnitude of the Qing state and its empire by 1800. For non-specialists, Guy's historical analysis of Manchu and Chinese provincial governors in perpetual motion is the proper tonic to put to the still smoldering conceits that survive from G. W. F. Hegel's, Karl Marx's, and Max Weber's fantasies of an unchanging 'Celestial Kingdom' going nowhere very fast."
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American Historical Review