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TZID:Eastern Standard Time
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DTSTART:20251102T020000
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DTSTART:20250301T020000
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DESCRIPTION:Identifying Wicked People in Beijing and the Qing State Percept
 ion of Social Order The talk\, “Identifying ‘Wicked People’ in Beijing and
  the Qing State Perception of Social Order” is part of a larger research p
 roject that will study how the Qing government and its police and security
  forces were obsessed with identifying and haunting down the so-called “wi
 cked people”—a term that was broadly defined to include from rubbers\, thi
 eves\, heretical sects\, and other criminals to corrupt officials\, clerks
 \, guards\, “evil merchants\,” gamblers\, vagabonds\, and unruly residents
 . In his talk\, Xu will also analyze the Qing state’s perception of social
  order and discuss its deep anxieties about potential social unrests. Yami
 n Xu\, a former editor of Wenyi bao (literary gazetteer)\, earned his PhD 
 in history from University of California at Berkeley in 2002. He is curren
 tly an associate professor at Le Moyne College\, teaching world and East A
 sia history. 
DTEND:20120224T183000Z
DTSTAMP:20260414T033119Z
DTSTART:20120224T173000Z
LOCATION:
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:East Asia Program presents: Yamin Xu
UID:RFCALITEM639117198791720358
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:Identifying Wicked People in Beijing and the Q
 ing State Perception of Social Order The talk\, “Identifying ‘Wicked Peopl
 e’ in Beijing and the Qing State Perception of Social Order” is part of a 
 larger research project that will study how the Qing government and its po
 lice and security forces were obsessed with identifying and haunting down 
 the so-called “wicked people”—a term that was broadly defined to include f
 rom rubbers\, thieves\, heretical sects\, and other criminals to corrupt o
 fficials\, clerks\, guards\, “evil merchants\,” gamblers\, vagabonds\, and
  unruly residents. In his talk\, Xu will also analyze the Qing state’s per
 ception of social order and discuss its deep anxieties about potential soc
 ial unrests. Yamin Xu\, a former editor of Wenyi bao (literary gazetteer)\
 , earned his PhD in history from University of California at Berkeley in 2
 002. He is currently an associate professor at Le Moyne College\, teaching
  world and East Asia history. <br>
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