摘要
The author of this essay is currently engaged in compiling a critical bibliography of the handbooks for officials composed during the imperial period (中国官箴公牍评书目 ). The present essay was composed in the course of this bibliographical work. The essay is divided into two parts. Part one examines the place of official handbooks in the history of administration in late imperil China. It seems that the fast increase in the output of official handbooks (官箴) and guides (指 南) of all sorts in the late Ming and the Qing must be considered in relation with the expansion of the state apparatus and with a trend towards more specialization in administrative work during tht period. The author stresses the important contribution of the privte secretarise (幕友) during the Qing; the muyou wrote a large number of specialized handbooks. The author also discusses the emergence and role of an "administrative elite" (治国精英) during the Qing period. This elite was composed of activist administrators with a very high idea of their duty towards the people and of the difficulty of their tasks; it included not only officials, but also muyou and other people interested in administration; it seems to have had a deep sense of its own importance as a community with shared pre - occupations and ideals. In Part two the author attempts a classification of the various types of official handbooks. He first discusses their contents (内容), and the the genres (形式). As far as contents are concerned, the main distinction is between texts insisting on the behavior Of officials (行为), and texts insisting on the technical aspects of administrative work (技巧). of course, many books combine the two types of contents, in variable proportion. As far as genres are concerned, the author discusses, among others, (1) the anthologies of official documents (公牍选编), which became animportant type of materials for the instruction Of officials during the Qing; (2) the handbooks for magistrates (州县官司入门书),
The author of this essay is currently engaged in compiling a critical bibliography of the handbooks for officials composed during the imperial period (中国官箴公牍评书目 ). The present essay was composed in the course of this bibliographical work. The essay is divided into two parts. Part one examines the place of official handbooks in the history of administration in late imperil China. It seems that the fast increase in the output of official handbooks (官箴) and guides (指 南) of all sorts in the late Ming and the Qing must be considered in relation with the expansion of the state apparatus and with a trend towards more specialization in administrative work during tht period. The author stresses the important contribution of the privte secretarise (幕友) during the Qing; the muyou wrote a large number of specialized handbooks. The author also discusses the emergence and role of an 'administrative elite' (治国精英) during the Qing period. This elite was composed of activist administrators with a very high idea of their duty towards the people and of the difficulty of their tasks; it included not only officials, but also muyou and other people interested in administration; it seems to have had a deep sense of its own importance as a community with shared pre - occupations and ideals. In Part two the author attempts a classification of the various types of official handbooks. He first discusses their contents (内容), and the the genres (形式). As far as contents are concerned, the main distinction is between texts insisting on the behavior Of officials (行为), and texts insisting on the technical aspects of administrative work (技巧). of course, many books combine the two types of contents, in variable proportion. As far as genres are concerned, the author discusses, among others, (1) the anthologies of official documents (公牍选编), which became animportant type of materials for the instruction Of officials during the Qing; (2) the handbooks for magistrates (州县官司入�
出处
《清史研究》
CSSCI
北大核心
1999年第1期3-20,共18页
The Qing History Journal