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Exploring Death in Modern China

Harvard Fairbanks Center for Chinese Studies hosts a talk by Christian Henriot on the study of death in Chinese urban history.

When:
May 31, 2016 12:00pm to 1:30pm
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Presenter: Christian Henriot, professor of modern Chinese history at Aix-Marseille University and a Senior Research Fellow at the Institut Universitaire de France (2007-2012)

The issue of death loomed large in Chinese cities in the modern era. Despite its intrinsic importance in any society and its particular importance in the historical experience of Chinese cities, however, death is basically absent from the field of Chinese urban history. Based on a study of Shanghai between 1865 and 1965, Christian Henriot explores what death meant and represented in China during a period of immense social change. The central question the talk will address is: In view of known Chinese practices about death, how did death practices adapt to a modern, urbanized environment, and how did the interactions of social organizations and state authorities manage them? It will unveil facets of urban society in a tumultuous era that radically redefined the relationship of the Chinese with death.

About the speaker: Christian Henriot is Professor of modern Chinese history at Aix-Marseille University and a Senior Research Fellow at the Institut Universitaire de France (2007-2012). He is the author and editor of several books on modern Chinese history, including Prostitution and Sexuality in Shanghai. A Social History, 1849-1949 (Cambridge UP, 2001), In the Shadow of the Rising Sun. Shanghai under Japanese Occupation (Cambridge UP, 2004) and Visualizing China (Brill, 2012). His latest monograph, Scythe and the city. A social history of death in Shanghai (1865-1965) is due in April 2016 at Stanford University Press. Henriot is also the author of a digital research and resource platform on Shanghai history.