This is an excellent book, carefully researched, well argued, and well written, and it makes important contributions to the field. Protest with Chinese Characteristics is original and theoretically provocative, and I am not aware of any other book that has done the same work. -- Guobin Yang, Barnard College, Columbia University, author of The Power of the Internet in China: Citizen Activism Online Ho-fung Hung's book is for early modern China what Charles Tilly's Vendee was for early modern France--a pathbreaking, quantitative study of political protest and the social conditions behind it. Hung demonstrates that the evolution of popular protest in China did not simply recapitulate that of Western Europe; his detailed archival research shows that Chinese society for centuries wrestled with its own unique concepts of state/market and peasant/worker/state relationships, independent of Western influence. This landmark study will change the way we view protest in China, from imperial times to the present day. -- Jack A. Goldstone, Hazel Professor of Public Policy, George Mason University Ambitious, informative, and stimulating, this study deserves to be widely read. Summing Up: Essential. Choice An excellent example of systematic historical social science. There is much to like in the book-its theoretical clarity, novel evidence, and transparent methodology-but the main contribution lies in Hung's extension and reworking of prior work on early modern European contention to the Chinese case. -- Colin Beck American Journal of Sociology After reading this thought-provoking book, readers will have a better understanding of how Chinese popular movements can usefully be compared with their counterparts in non-China contexts. -- Wensheng Wang China Journal There is much to admire in this book. The profiles of protest are interesting and lively... American Historical Review This book has been written with utmost candour and clarity, which makes it immensely readable. -- Arnab Roy Chowdhury International Sociology This is historical sociology done at a particularly high level of both historical and sociological rigor. -- Daniel Little Contemporary Sociology Hung's clear articulation of protest cycles in eighteenth- and nineteenth-century China demands the attention of scholars interested in specific episodes of rebellion and resistance in this period as well as scholars of Qing political economy. Journal of Asian Studies