
The Kingless Generation Organizing Bourgeois Revolution in East Eurasia [PREVIEW]: The Water Margin (水浒传) w/ River
Jan 28, 2026
A lively preview traces The Water Margin through Ming publishing, merchant capital, and Eurasian literary networks. They spotlight bandits of Mount Liang, debates over rebellion versus amnesty, and competing versions of the text. Discussion centers on the contrast between Iron Ox’s impulsive violence and Song Jiang’s Confucian compromises. They also tackle censorship strategies, misogyny, and how later edits reshape the story’s politics.
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Banditry As Proto-Bourgeois Politics
- The Water Margin depicts bandits as proto-bourgeois actors embedded in market-linked corruption.
- The novel reflects merchant-capital and bureaucratic contradictions during late Song/Ming publishing booms.
Novel Birth Tied To Eurasian Market Growth
- Fergal situates the Ming novel tradition as a Eurasian outcome of renewed merchant capitalism and literary forms.
- He links novelistic interiority and romantic adventure to broader trans-Eurasian commercialization.
Social Bandits, Not Socialist Revolutionaries
- The Water Margin embodies the social bandit archetype: popular, not socialist, yet proto-revolutionary.
- Fergal connects this to global Robin Hood-like figures shaped by local merchant-bureaucratic ties.








