In this paper, I analyze the memories of the Manchu wars and the manner in
which literary descriptions of the Qing dynasty were made in several seventeenth-
century-era stories. The descriptions of the battle of Simha (1619) used
as subject matter for novels and the portrayals of the historical figures of
Nurhachi and Huangtaiji are analyzed in order to identify the perceptions of
the Qing dynasty implied in the novel texts contemporary to the change of
regime from Ming to Qing. The battle of Simha was depicted concretely in
such tales as Choe Cheok jeon, Kang Ro jeon, and Kim Yeong-cheol jeon. In
these stories, the writers described the orderly and powerful Qing army in a
positive manner. Even writing in an era in which the perceptions of the Qing
dynasty were negative, the authors of these three stories realistically accepted
the reorganized power structure centered around the newly emerging Qing,
and its emperors Nurhachi and Huangtaiji were described respectfully as positive
characters with magnanimity who could gain the trust of the people and
unify all of China. This description of Qing dynasty China is the result of the
conscious efforts of the writers to objectively understand the entity of Qing and
critically reflect on Joseon dynasty politics.