<b>Lecture:</b> Charles Sanft (University of Tennessee)

Lecture: Charles Sanft (University of Tennessee)

11/05/2015 orient Events, News

1) Communication and Cooperation in Early Imperial China

The talk draws from received history, the results of archaeological excavation, and current secondary scholarship to argue for the importance of non-coercive  government under the early empire. It argues that despite its reputation as a harsh and totalitarian regime, the Qin dynasty employed a sophisticated apparatus that sought not simply to compel obedience to its order but also to persuade the population to accept its governance.

When: Monday, 11 May, 2015, 15:30-17:00
Where: Fairbank Library, Oriental Institute, Pod Vodarenskou Vezi 4, Prague 8

2) Household Registration Records from Liye: Household, Community, State

The bureaucracy of the Qin empire created and maintained power relationships between the state and the populace. The most pervasive of its institutional systems was household registration, which theoretically recorded every person in the realm. Each member of the populace in this way became known to the state in terms of core identifying information, permitting the state to track individuals across time and geographical space. Even as this system and its correlates gathered information about persons, they also disseminated information about the state, in that they created knowledge of the government’s presence and reach throughout the newly constituted realm. Historians have acquired new knowledge about these systems due to archaeological discoveries in recent decades, particularly at Liye 里耶, Hunan province, which have provided example documents from these systems. This paper considers examples of relevant materials from Liye and discusses their implications for our understanding of early imperial governance.

When: Tuesday, 12 May, 2015, 9:00-11:00
Where: Charles University, Celetna 20, Prague 1, room no. 118 (CCK-ISC)

Charles Sanft’s research focuses on the political thought and practice of early imperial China, from around the late third century BCE into the first century CE. He has published articles on legal history, ritual, and translations and studies of paleographic materials from the time in journals including Early China, Environmental History, Asia Major, Frontiers of History in China, and others. His book, Communication and Cooperation in Early Imperial China: Publicizing the Qin Dynasty, was published by the State University of New York Press in 2014 as part of the SUNY series in Chinese Philosophy and Culture.

Additional information:
– Charles Sanft’s webpages: http://history.utk.edu/peopletwo/charles-sanft/
– Oliver Weingarten’s review of Ch. Sanft, Communication and Cooperation in Early Imperial China (http://chinet.cz/reviews/history/communication-and-cooperation-in-early-imperial-china-publicizing-theqin-dynasty/)

For more information see www.orient.cas.cz


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