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明朝中兴实录

Edmondsen
The Restoration Records of the Ming is a work of speculative “historical reenactment” built on the late-Ming/early-Qing fault line. It asks a single, unforgiving question: when the same collapse, the same invasion, and the same bureaucratic net descend again—does history still end in the same place? The book is not driven by a simplistic calculus of victory and defeat. Its core is an inquiry into where humiliation comes from, and how it can be erased. Humiliation is never the work of an external enemy alone; it is also born from the collapse of internal order—institutions that fail, rules that stop working, and a people who can no longer trust one another. Accordingly, “erasing” humiliation is not only a counteroffensive on the battlefield. It is the rebuilding of a rule-set that can reconnect a shattered society—what the novel calls Gates, Routes, and Rosters. Gates are the nodes through which people and goods must pass; Routes are repeatable procedures that make passage possible without begging or bribery; Rosters are the network’s eyes—structured knowledge that replaces rumor, panic, and arbitrary accusation. Rebuilding them means restoring predictability where terror thrives: ensuring that ordinary people are no longer called out by name at will, stripped at will, killed at will; ensuring that the state no longer depends on the lucky appearance of a single hero, but endures through sustainable institutions and coordination. In the end, the “Restoration of the Ming” becomes a rebuttal to historical inevitability. The novel argues that if, at the first moment of breakdown, we can preserve the skeleton of order, then history does not have to repeat its most humiliating chapters.
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