Tang Center for Early China

唐氏早期中國研究中心
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September 26, 2025

Early China Seminar Lecture Series

Title: “The Paradox of Hegemony: The Logics of Political (Dis)integration and Lineage Segmentation in Spring and Autumn China”
Speaker: Chris Kim, New York University
Time: September 26, 2025 (4:30-6:30 PM EST)
Venue: Kent Hall 403

**Please use the ‘Request Pre-circulated Paper’ link to RSVP by September 22. All visitors without a CUID are required to receive pre-authorization to gain access to Morningside campus as per guidelines of Columbia Morningside campus access. Attendees must present a government-issued ID with their name matching exactly the name registered for the event, along with an one-time QR code (via email), for entry.

The political history of the Spring and Autumn period (722–481 BCE) was marked by two overarching, seemingly inverse trends. On one hand, the hundreds of polities comprising the fragmented multi-state order of the era competed, conquered, and were gradually consolidated into a handful of larger territorial constructs. On the other hand, peering under the veneer, we see a picture of increasing disintegration as elite lineages constantly split and segmented into cadet branches that provoked intense intra-state discord often more destructive than the wars between states. The goal of this seminar is to unpack and explore the ebbs and flows of centripetal and centrifugal impulses involved in these two interdependent trends and reassess or challenge this narrative of the fundamental shift in the organizational principles of early Chinese state and society in the Spring and Autumn period. The wide range of associated social and political developments of the era will be introduced for discussion through a set of heuristic dichotomies including patriarch-monarch, warrior-soldier, and shaman-bureaucrat. While I will draw as examples mainly on textual and archaeological evidence from the state of Qi, it is hoped that incorporating participants’ expertise on other states, regions, or periods will shed additional light on regional variabilities or alternative processes of socio-political change in early China (Image source: Sancai tuhui 三才圖會, 1609).

Request Pre-circulated Paper

Filed Under: events_2025_2026, hmpg-carousel-recently-at, seminar_spa_2025_2026

Announcement

October 17, 2025
Early China Seminar – Andrew Meyer, Brooklyn College CUNY
Call for Applications
Tang Center’s programs of the 2026 – 2027 academic year are open for submission!
New Publication – Tang Center Series in Early China
The Allure of the Mirror – Yanlong Guo
Forthcoming Publication – Tang Center Series in Early China
Writing and Materiality in Ancient China – Luke Waring

Contact:

Tang Center for Early China – Columbia University
606 Uris Hall, MC 5984
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New York, NY 10027

Mailing address:
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1140 Amsterdam Ave,
Tel: 212.854.5546  Fax: 212.851.2510
E-mail: [email protected]

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