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X-WR-CALNAME;VALUE=TEXT:Every Man a Merchant: Plays of the Suzhou Circle and the Making of an Early Modern Economic Subject
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SUMMARY:Every Man a Merchant: Plays of the Suzhou Circle and the Making of an Early Modern Economic Subject
DESCRIPTION:<h2>	<img alt="An old Chinese painting" height="324" src="https://static.hwpi.harvard.edu/files/styles/os_files_xxlarge/public/mahindra/files/china.jpg?m=1587658594&amp;itok=fH5NzSNc" title="" width="900"></h2><h2>	<a href="internal:/china-humanities" title="">CHINA HUMANITIES</a></h2><h2>	SPEAKER: Ariel Fox, University of Chicago</h2><p>	This talk explores the way in which commercial identities are recast and recreated in the plays of the Suzhou circle, a group of collaborative playwrights active in the mid-seventeenth century. In plays that center the denizens of the marketplace, the Suzhou circle brings to the fore those who were often pointedly excluded from the roles of romantic lead, Confucian exemplar, or heroic adventurer. The refashioning of the merchant from anxiety-producing object to sympathetic subject appears across late Ming philosophical and literary discourses, but more than just a genre-specific iteration, these plays make use of the conventions of chuanqi drama to deconstruct and open up the nature and meaning of merchanthood. Through a reading of three plays—Zhan huakui 占花魁 (Winning the Prize Courtesan), Shiwu guan 十五貫 (Fifteen Strings of Cash), and Qingzhong pu 清忠譜 (Register of the Pure and Loyal)—I argue that the merchant is recuperated not only as a moral figure but as a universal and sublime one. At a moment of unprecedented commercial penetration, such a transformation of the merchant-role becomes a site for the early modern subject to elaborate a more fluid self-conception.</p><p>	<drupal-media data-entity-type="media" data-entity-uuid="56fa89de-22e0-4142-8ea8-9bdd47f72450" alt="Plate 4 illustration from Winning the Prize Courtesan" data-view-mode="hwp_small"></drupal-media></p><h3>	About the Speaker</h3><p>	Ariel Fox is an assistant professor of Chinese literature in the Department of East Asian Languages and Civilizations and the Committee on Theater and Performance Studies at the University of Chicago. Her research interests include late imperial Chinese fiction and drama, numismatics and the economic imaginary, and the histories of dance, movement, and gesture. Her first book, <em>The Cornucopian Stage: Performing Commerce in Early Modern China</em>, is forthcoming from Harvard University Asia Center in 2023. She is currently working on a literary history of Chinese money.</p><h3>	How To join</h3><p>	This is a hybrid event. To attend virtually, please add your name and email address to <a data-url="https://harvard.zoom.us/meeting/register/tJYvc-mqqzwpG9Ua1fmcmUZXivD3TBu0WLMX" href="https://harvard.zoom.us/meeting/register/tJYvc-mqqzwpG9Ua1fmcmUZXivD3TBu0WLMX" title="">this registration page</a>. After registering, you will receive a confirmation email with a link and passcode to the event. </p><p>	If you have any questions, please conatct Amy Zhang at <a href="mailto:%20ayzhang@g.harvard.edu">ayzhang@g.harvard.edu </a></p>
LOCATION:2 Divinity Ave. 136 - Yenching Common Room
STATUS:CONFIRMED
DTSTART:20230306T210000Z
DTEND:20230306T210000Z
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