13/04/2026
Next Mon, 20 April at 5.15pm - Seminar on 'Smashing Statues as Posthumous Punishment in Imperial China' with Dr Desmond Cheung.
The smashing of statues has caught widespread attention in recent years, often in the context of condemning imperialism and colonialism and their enduring legacy by literally bringing down the figures of empire.
But amid these raging controversies, there has been little reference to the different meanings that the creation of statues – and their destruction – might have outside this contemporary anti-imperialist context.
In this seminar, Dr Desmond Cheung will present cases from Hangzhou during the Ming dynasty (1368 to 1644), specifically the Shrine of Yue Fei and the Feilaifeng rock sculptures at Lingyin Monastery, where the smashing of statues that occurred within very different cultural contexts might help us to think about the purpose of public statues in a new light. Smashing statues might not only concern the destruction of what one condemns, but also constitute a constructive and meaningful act, a form of posthumous punishment that contributes to public narratives of history.
Find out more and register here:
In this seminar, Dr Desmond Cheung will examine cases of statue smashing in Hangzhou during the Ming dynasty, analysing their significance.