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lchen2024.bsky.social
JD/PhD, UToronto historian of post-1500 Chinese law/politics/culture/intl relations; law & empire & postcolonial studies. Author of "Chinese Law in Imperial Eyes: Sovereignty, Justice, and Transcultural Politics”.
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I meant to link a different NYT article instead of this one which has been shared last time. But here is the new NYT gift article. www.nytimes.com/2025/01/26/u...
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A typo. Should be Han Zheng.
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An interesting followup. The Chinese government has agreed to send Vice President/Chairman Han Zhen to attend Trump’s inauguration ceremony—a gesture of goodwill and a "meet-in-the-middle" approach. Trump just had a seemingly positive phone conversations with Xi. It’s a wait-and-see situation now.
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Justice Gorsuch's concluding remark even more emphatically supports my point above. I am interested in tracing the history of how this 21st-century "foreign adversary" was made in and by American politics.
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When I read the news, my first thought was: Isn’t this just another way of currying favor with Trump by gifting him $15 million? How is this any different from bribery? :)
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Typo: "Given Trump's love of personal diplomacy."
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The reason offered for rewarding their persistence is also interesting.
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How dedicated were late imperial Chinese literati to the civil service exams? Many failed 10 times (about 30 years), but how old could they be? Even the emperors felt compelled to give honorary degrees if they failed again, say, in their late 80s, as seen in the 1852 request for a xiucai, aged 89.
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Another NYT gift article, on another tactic China has borrowed from U.S. practices on int'l trade: ban on transshipment of exported products by foreign companies to a 3rd country (U.S.). The U.S.-China trade war may escalate quickly if Trump does go all in next year. www.nytimes.com/2024/12/09/b...
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The article was shared by the Institute of Humanities and Social Sciences of Peking University, where I was a visiting professor in fall 2023. A wonderful program for intl scholars interested in truly interdisciplinary conversations & scholarship at a top research univ. in Beijing for a few months.
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One of my favorite books in the modern China field, not necessarily because we read chapters of her book manuscript in one of my first doctoral seminars at Columbia before it became an award-winning book :).
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In the Qing period, these two-, three-, or even four-register page formats were used quite often in treatises on the Qing Code or forensic examinations (Xiyuan lu) due to their efficient and convenient allocation of the limited space, even in well-printed commercial editions for muyou & officials.
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Pictures from the western end of "China proper" as famously noted by the Tang-era poet Wang Wei: "I urge you to drink another cup of wine/For beyond the Yang Pass, there will be no old friends."劝君跟进一杯酒/西出阳关无故人.The first one shows remains of the earliest (Qin-Han) Great Wall from over 2000 years ago.
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Added you to Late Imperial China SP.
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But the problem with ✘ may be precisely because it has too much political information, esp. all kinds of misinformation, as Trump and Musk like to call it :).
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China has been surprisingly restrained in its responses to the many U.S. trade/high-tech bans and sanctions over the past eight years, possibly because the current PRC leadership does not want to add international crises to its already very serious economic woes at home.
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This is what I warned about before: Other countries, once they gain their competitive advantages, can and will borrow the U.S. playbook to arbitrarily impose trade or high-tech restrictions, also claiming "national security/interest" or "dual-use" as the pretext. www.nytimes.com/2024/12/03/w...
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This is what I warned about before: Other countries, once they gain their competitive advantages, can and will borrow the U.S. playbook to arbitrarily impose trade or high-tech restrictions, also claiming "national security/interest" or "dual-use" as the pretext. www.nytimes.com/2024/12/03/w...
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I should have mentioned this earlier (but was constrained by the word limit): these two registers include royal pets exclusively from the period of 1822–1850 (the Daoguang period).
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This's a late 18th-century scroll painting of pets allegedly of the Qianlong emperor (Cf. www.burninghou.se/p/the-empero..., a link [email protected]). If the naming practice was true, Qianlong liked the Chinese character 狸 (wildcats/civets), but the names didn't sound more majestic or masculine.
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I came across these files accidentally, which are unrelated to my research interests. I saw no images attached, though some pictures of the royal pets have survived (probably of the emperors only). Here's one shared by a scholar following my post: www.burninghou.se/p/the-empero.... No name matches.
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A dog named 角端犼儿 held the longevity record (10 days shy of 15 lunar calendar years). 角端 (jiaoduan) is a legendary horned beast in Chinese mythology and 犼儿 (hǒu'er) is another powerful mythical beast. Combining the two in its name perhaps helped to counteract the bad fengshui in the Qing palaces :).
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Some royal dog names: 栀子Gardenia/喜姐Happy Sister/桃花: Peach Blossom/栗子Chestnut/玉狮子Jade Lion/喜豹 Happy Leopard/玉虎Jade Tiger/可怜儿Poor Little One/妞儿Little Girl 角端犼儿 Horned Mythical Beast Hǒu'er(15yrs) Some cat names: 玛瑙花横儿Carnelian flower branch/秋葵Okra/金橘Kumquat/墨虎 Ink Tiger/喜豹Happy Leopard/双桃儿Double Peach
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correction: “These pets' names and life cycles"
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Besides some male royals, many court concubines loved pets because they often lived lonely lives for decades, with pets becoming their most loyal and often only reliable companions. These pet's names and life cycles might also reflect the circumstances of their lady owners, many of whom died young.
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1. How seriously did late imperial China's rulers treat their pets and/or job of archiving their everyday lives? Here're 2 registers from the No. 1 Historical Archives of the Qing royal family's cats and dogs (with names & years of birth/death). Two cats died after 9 years & one dog after 15 years.