Tristan G. Brown is assistant professor of history at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
""Winner of the John K. Fairbank Prize, American Historical Association"" ""A Choice Outstanding Academic Title of the Year"" ""Winner of the Biannual Book Prize, International Society of Chinese Law and History"" ""Laws of the Land is a gripping, overdue study: enlightening, challenging, and utterly inspiring.""---Wendy Xiaoxue Sun, Asian Review of Books ""Brown’s study makes it possible to reconstruct what happened to the Chinese order in the period between the Industrial Revolution, the establishment of the capitalist model of production, and the global development of colonialism. The volume complements and enriches the work of economic historians such as Giovanni Arrighi, Kaoru Sugihara, Bin Wong, and Fernand Braudel."" * Journal of Interdisciplinary History of Ideas * ""Excellent . . . Meticulous and fascinating."" * Choice * ""With Laws of the Land, Tristan G. Brown fundamentally reframes the debates over fengshui in the Qing. . . . This is an important provocation to historians of Chinese law, religion, and environment, and it should be widely read by students and scholars in those fields and in modern Chinese history more broadly.""---Ian M. Miller, Twentieth-Century China ""[Laws of the Land] is carefully, thoughtfully, and elegantly crafted.""---Hailian Chen, H-Water ""[Laws of the Land] gives an excellent insight into fēngshuǐ during the Qīng. . . . [and] offers a fascinating lens into the broader Qīng religious landscape: Brown’s use of legal cases successfully demonstrates the extent to which fēngshuǐ, and more broadly popular religion, is deeply and intricately embedded in everyday life.""---Joseph Chadwin, Religious Studies Review