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The Book of Swindles

September 25, 2017

This is an age of deception. Con men ply the roadways. Bogus alchemists pretend to turn one piece of silver into three. Devious nuns entice young women into adultery. Sorcerers use charmed talismans for mind control and murder. A pair of dubious monks extorts money from a powerful official and then spends it on whoring. A rich student tries to bribe the chief examiner, only to hand his money to an imposter. A eunuch kidnaps boys and consumes their "essence" in an attempt to regrow his penis. These are just a few of the entertaining and surprising tales to be found in this seventeenth-century work, said to be the earliest Chinese collection of swindle stories.

The Book of Swindles, compiled by an obscure writer from southern China, presents a fascinating tableau of criminal ingenuity. The flourishing economy of the late Ming period created overnight fortunes for merchants—and gave rise to a host of smooth operators, charlatans, forgers, and imposters seeking to siphon off some of the new wealth. The Book of Swindles, which was ostensibly written as a manual for self-protection in this shifting and unstable world, also offers an expert guide to the art of deception. Each story comes with commentary by the author, Zhang Yingyu, who expounds a moral lesson while also speaking as a connoisseur of the swindle. This volume, which contains annotated translations of just over half of the eighty-odd stories in Zhang's original collection, provides a wealth of detail on social life during the late Ming and offers words of warning for a world in peril.

Speakers

Christopher Rea is Associate Professor of Asian Studies and former Director of the Centre for Chinese Research at the University of British Columbia. He is author of The Age of Irreverence: A New History of Laughter in China (California, 2015), which won the 2017 Joseph Levenson Book Prize (post-1900 China). He is editor of several books on modern Chinese culture, including China’s Literary Cosmopolitans (Brill, 2015), Humans, Beasts, and Ghosts (Columbia, 2011), and, with Nicolai Volland, The Business of Culture (UBC Press, 2015).

Bruce Rusk is a specialist in the cultural history of early modern China, from the fifteenth to eighteenth centuries. He focuses on the history of scholarship and of practices of deception and authentication. He is an associate professor of Asian studies at the University of British Columbia, where he teaches courses in the history of Confucianism, the culture of writing in East Asia, and Classical Chinese. He is the author of Critics and Commentators: The Book of Poems as Classic and Literature (2012) and several articles on the Confucian classics and the material culture of the Ming period (1368-1644).

Date
Monday, September 25, 2017

Time
6:30 - 8:00pm

Place
¶¡ÏãÔ°AV Harbour Centre 
515 W. Hastings, Vancouver
7000 Earl & Jennie Lohn Policy Room

Light refreshments will be served.

Please register .

Sponsor

  • David See-chai Lam Centre