Genre Networks and Empire: Rhetoric in Early Imperial China: Rhetoric in Early Imperial China
As the back of the book says, “Genre Networks and Empire integrates a decolonial and transnational approach to construct a rhetorical history of early imperial China.” You applies the concept of genre and genre networks to activity systems developing in early imperial China, providing an analysis of how several rhetorical genres developed, thrived, and interacted across this history. It’s inherently interesting, especially for someone who is interested in how administrative work happens in different cultures.
I’ll offer a very gentle critique at the start. This book could have been written without the concepts of rhetoric, genre, activity systems, and perhaps without the concept of decolonialism as well. Many books and articles that examine similar networks of text types have been, mainly in anthropology and sociology. Like those books, this one could offer a compelling analysis that doesn’t use those concepts and still reveals the complex dialogic workings of early imperial China.
Nevertheless, it does use those concepts. In the Introduction, You lays down some stakes. In terms of decolonialism, You argues that “in efforts to decenter Western epistemology … there exists a tendency to use non-Western concepts and practices into rhetorical studies without fully attending to the oppressive social structures from which these concepts and practices emerge. This book argues that in studies of a non-Western rhetoric, the decolonial option must include an exposition of the imperial, colonial, ethnic, racial, and sometimes feudal matrix of power residing in that tradition” (p.2). This idea — treating non-Westerners as just as complex and conflicted as Westerners — is characterized as a “decolonial move” (p.2), and ultimately seems respectful to the culture under examination. You also argues that early imperial China is “a period rendered invisible by Western biases” (p.2). “To explore rhetoric and autocracy, this book argues that Chinese networked theories of genre are essential, as a distributed use of genres was instrumental for imperial government” (p.3). You asks: “How did genres function as a tool for generating and reproducing the imperial matrix of power? What opportunities did genre networks create for political participation? How did they mediate in policy discussions that impacted the far reaches of the empire? How did court historians portray and theorize genre networks as a political institution?” (p.4).
You takes aim at the Western idea that rhetoric only takes root in democracies, “where cacophonous voices are heard and negotiated” (p.7), and blames the Western lack of interest in imperial China on this bias, since it was not democratic. I do think that Western rhetoricians might be stuck on the idea that public rhetoric emerged in Athenian democracy — but then again, many Westerners have shown interest in bureaucratic rhetorical discourse, which is hardly appealing to public deliberation in a democratic setting. That is, I see what You is driving at, but I think he might be overgeneralizing the claim, and he might find some useful work on genre in professional communication studies.
In any case, he doesn’t need to appeal to Western scholarship, since antecedents exist in Chinese scholarship. You argues that rhetoric really did take place in imperial China in identifiable genres working within networks, and studying these genre networks allows him to get to materiality and rhetoric (p.10). To that aim, he provides a genealogy of genre studies in China (p.10), including a Chinese network theory of genre that theorizes hierarchies among genres as well as aesthetic order (p.12). Although he connects this work to Western concepts such as activity systems (p.15) and genre as social action (p.16), he keeps the focus on this Chinese scholarship. He concludes by outlining the hierarchies explored in this book: a metaphysical order, a gender hierarchy, a politico-military organization, an ethnic hierarchy, an aesthetic hierarchy, and a linguistic hierarchy (pp.18-19). Under these concerns, he examines “representative genre networks,” where “a genre network is defined as an array of connections and meanings that unfold as a discourse, or a seriesof discourses, is produced and circulated in response to a sociopolitical exigency” (p.19). He examines each genre network to understand how it “generated meanings and political power” (p.19).
Throughout the rest of the book, You delivers on these promises, providing lucid descriptions of the genre networks at play in different points of imperial Chinese history. Particularly interesting to me is Chapter 5, in which he explores the clash between the Vertical-Horizontal school and the Spring and Autumn Annals — two distinct genre styles grounded in different theories of suasion.
In the conclusion, You argues that genre networks sustained and enacted a Confucian form of government; encouraged self-cultivation; regulated elite families; and enabled the ruler and officials to actuate the imperial myth (p.167). He also (once again) returns to decoloniality: “While seeking non-Western epistemologies does aid decoloniality by allowing us to think, feel, understand, and live otherwise, we must keep in mind the histories of their appropriation by the colonial and imperial powers” (p.171).
Overall, I got a lot from this book. Granted, the discussion of decolonialism felt a bit tacked on to me — as someone who has read anthropological, archaeological, and sociological work set in non-Western societies, the stance that You articulates seems pretty common-sense to me. I wondered whether this decolonialist discussion was really organic to the book, or whether it was an attempt to connect the book to reviewer concerns. But getting past that, the book offers a fascinating account of genre networks in imperial China on their own terms, entering into these periods to understand their governing theories and assumptions, bureaucratic practices, and balance of powers. This is where I think the book really shines, and I definitely plan to return to it as I think through materiality and genre further. If you’re interested in genre theory, genre networks, bureaucratic discourse, or imperial China, definitely check it out.