Communication and Cooperation in Early Imperial China: Publicizing the Qin Dynasty
(State University of New York Press, 2014)
Communication and Cooperation in Early Imperial China: Publicizing the Qin Dynasty
by Charles Sanft
Charles Sanft’s book Communication and Cooperation in Early Imperial China: Publicizing the Qin Dynasty (2014) challenges longstanding notions of the Qin dynasty, China’s first imperial rulers. Historians have long portrayed the Qin as epitomizing totalitarian government. Communication and Cooperation synthesizes received accounts and new information from archaeology in China with interdisciplinary theory to provide a reconsideration of this key period in China’s history. It shows that rather than ruling solely or even primarily through oppression, the Qin had a sophisticated approach to rule that incorporated significant non-coercive tactics that relied on media to encourage cooperation between the public and the emperor.