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Death by a Thousand Cuts (book)

Death by a Thousand Cuts
Death by a Thousand Cuts.jpg
Front cover of Death by a Thousand Cuts
Author Timothy Brook,
Jérôme Bourgon,
Gregory Blue
Country United States
Language English
Genre History
Publisher Harvard University Press
Publication date
15 March 2008
Media type Print (Hardback)
Pages 336 pp.
ISBN

Death by a Thousand Cuts is a book by the historians Timothy Brook and Gregory Blue and scientific researcher Jérôme Bourgon which examines the use of slow slicing or lingchi, a form of torture and capital punishment practised in mid- and late-Imperial China from the tenth century until its abolition in 1905.

Death by a Thousand Cuts investigates the use of slow slicing or lingchi, a form of torture and capital punishment practised in mid- and late-Imperial China from the tenth century until its abolition in 1905.Lingchi involved repeatedly slicing the convict's flesh beyond the point of death.

By the time of the final imperial dynasty, the punishment could be meted out for an offence as simple as striking a teacher.

The authors argue that this was more than a physical punishment, as the victim was sedated with opium and killed early in the process, but about denying the victim "somatic integrity" and denying them any hope of a life after death which, the authors argue, caused them to feel shame.

A staff reviewer at The New Yorker describes the book as a "fascinating study".

A staff reviewer at The Times states that "the authors present a nuanced picture of state-imposed execution and, without at any time condoning, succeed in their goal of contextualising lingchi in relation to Western forms of punishment" and that "this challenging and important work will appeal not solely to Sinologists, but to legal historians and students of visual representation."

Jonathan Mirsky in Literary Review writes that "[the authors] write coolly and formally, but this is a book primarily about torment."


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