The_Book_of_Swindles

<i>The Book of Swindles</i>

The Book of Swindles

1617 Chinese short story collection about fraud


The Book of Swindles (Piàn jīng 騙經), also known by its longer title, A New Book for Foiling Swindlers, Based on Worldly Experience (Jiānghú lìlǎn dùpiàn xīnshū 江湖歷覽杜騙新書), is said to be the first published and printed Chinese short story collection about fraud.[1] Written and compiled by Zhang Yingyu (張應俞), a man who lived in the early to mid 16th-century, it was published in Fujian province in or around 1617, and most of its stories are set during the latter part of the Ming dynasty.

To each story the author adds a commentary that in some cases offers a moral lesson and in some cases shows appreciation for the artistry of the swindler, often praising the cleverness of the con and blaming its victim.[2]

Modern editions have been entitled both The Book Against Swindles (Fangpian jing) and The Book of Swindles (Pian jing). A selected English translation, The Book of Swindles: Selections from a Late Ming Collection, translated by Christopher Rea and Bruce Rusk, was published by Columbia University Press in 2017.[3]

Background and themes

The first edition of 1617 has the full title A New Book for Foiling Swindlers, Based on Worldly Experience (Jianghu lilan dupian xinshu), suggesting that it is a guide to avoiding swindles and to negotiating the risky world of the traveling merchant, a life that an increasing number of people were leading in the growing commercial economy of the late Ming.

Types of swindle

The Book of Swindles is divided into twenty-four categories of swindle:

  1. Misdirection and Theft
  2. The Bag Drop
  3. Money Changing
  4. Misrepresentation
  5. False Relations
  6. Brokers
  7. Enticement to Gambling
  8. Showing Off Wealth
  9. Scheming for Wealth
  10. Robbery
  11. Violence
  12. On Boats
  13. Poetry
  14. Fake Silver
  15. Government Underlings
  16. Marriage
  17. Illicit Passion
  18. Women
  19. Kidnapping
  20. Corruption in Education
  21. Monks and Priests
  22. Alchemy
  23. Sorcery
  24. Pandering[4]

Author

Zhang Yingyu, style name Kui Zhong (夔衷), is an obscure figure. The Book of Swindles is the only known work to appear under his name, and no other records of him are known. A note on the title page of one Ming dynasty copy claims that he was from Zhejiang province, while a 1617 preface says that he was from Fujian.[2]

Relationship with other literary works and genres

The Book of Swindles incorporates elements from a variety of other Chinese genres, especially court case (gong'an) fiction, in which a capable magistrate solves a crime.[5] Stories involving sorcerers, Buddhist monks, and Daoist priests, who engage in alchemy or dream spirit possession, include motifs from supernatural tales. Other stories, featuring suspense, surprise and revelation, resemble jokes in structure. A minority include apocryphal anecdotes about historical figures.[6]

Other works of fiction from the same time period, such as stories by Feng Menglong (1574–1645), Ling Mengchu (1580–1644), and Li Yu (1610–80), as well as novels such as The Water Margin (Shui hu zhuan) and Plum in the Golden Vase (Jin ping mei), feature accounts of similar scenarios of deception and trickery.[2] Collections of swindle stories can also be found in contemporary China.[citation needed]


References

  1. Christopher Rea and Bruce Rusk, "Translators' Introduction," in Zhang Yingyu, The Book of Swindles (Columbia, 2017), p. xiii.
  2. Rea, Christopher; Rusk, Bruce (2017). Yingyu, Zhang (ed.). The Book of Swindles: Selections from a Late Ming Collection. New York: Columbia University Press. pp. xiii–xxxviii. ISBN 978-0231178624. JSTOR 10.7312/zhan16862.4.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: date and year (link)
  3. Translations from Rea, Christopher; Rusk, Bruce (2017). YINGYU, ZHANG (ed.). The Book of Swindles. Selections from a Late Ming Collection. Columbia University Press. pp. V–IX. ISBN 9780231178624. JSTOR 10.7312/zhan16862.2.
  4. Robert Hegel, "Review of The Book of Swindles: Selections from a Late Ming Collection", Ming Studies issue 77 (2018): 80–83.
  5. Rob Moore, "Dirty Rotten Scoundrels", LARB China Channel. Archived on 1 July 2018.

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