
Eunuch and Emperor in the Great Age of Qing Rule offers a new interpretation of eunuchs and their connection to imperial rule in the first century and a half of the Qing dynasty (1644–1800). This... Read More
- American Historical Review"Norman A. Kutcher provides an insightful, historically sympathetic analysis of the institution of the eunuch in Qing China by investigating the emperors’ efforts to use and control both this institution and the individual eunuchs’ lived experiences. . . . This book is a significant, important contribution to the scholarship on Qing emperorship and eunuch history."
- China Quarterly"Norman Kutcher has written an erudite, ground-breaking and richly documented study that walks us through the community of eunuchs in Beijing as they moved in and out of the Forbidden City, princely households, and the Old Summer Palace in the 17th and 18th centuries . . . Generalists and specialists will discover in Kutcher's study many other fascinating topics, and these include the personalities of the Qing emperors, the physiology of eunuchs, medical history of castration, and the poignant narratives of eunuch survival and suicide."
- China Review International"The interpretive analogy suggested by the author presents a realistic and detailed must-read answer to the question of what it meant to be a eunuch during the Qing."
– American Historical Review"Norman A. Kutcher provides an insightful, historically sympathetic analysis of the institution of the eunuch in Qing China by investigating the emperors’ efforts to use and control both this institution and the individual eunuchs’ lived experiences. . . . This book is a significant, important contribution to the scholarship on Qing emperorship and eunuch history."
– China Quarterly"Norman Kutcher has written an erudite, ground-breaking and richly documented study that walks us through the community of eunuchs in Beijing as they moved in and out of the Forbidden City, princely households, and the Old Summer Palace in the 17th and 18th centuries . . . Generalists and specialists will discover in Kutcher's study many other fascinating topics, and these include the personalities of the Qing emperors, the physiology of eunuchs, medical history of castration, and the poignant narratives of eunuch survival and suicide."
– China Review International"The interpretive analogy suggested by the author presents a realistic and detailed must-read answer to the question of what it meant to be a eunuch during the Qing."