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"Classic yet Exceptional: Slave Societies of Medieval East Asia," Don Wyatt, Middlebury College

Don J. Wyatt
January 26, 2026
4:00 pm - 5:30 pm
TBA

Presenter: Don Wyatt, John M. McCardell, Jr. Distinguished Professor, Middlebury College

Don J. Wyatt

Abstract
Writing in his influential Ancient Slavery and Modern Ideology, in identifying what he considered foremost to be the three foundational constituent elements of any slave society, the prominent classicist, Moses Finley posited that they were “the slave’s property status, the totality of the power over him, and his kinlessness.” The chief paradigm for Finley’s postulations was of course slave society as it had become articulated in the ancient civilizations of Greece and especially Rome. However, much of the potency of Finley’s thesis has rested in its applicability to the later iterations of slave society as it transpired in the West. Nevertheless, let it be noted that, in East Asia of medieval times, we witness noteworthy conformance to but also deviation from Finley’s theorization. Consequently, the slave societies of medieval East Asia serve well in illustrating how, between cultures and across time, the criteria for what constitutes a true slave society can oftentimes vary and deviate even quite profoundly from the assumed Western norm.

About Don J. Wyatt:
DON J. WYATT is the John M. McCardell, Jr. Distinguished Professor at Middlebury College. He attended Beloit College in Wisconsin, graduating Phi Beta Kappa with a B.A. in Religious Studies in 1975. He entered Harvard University’s Regional Studies-East Asia program in 1976, taking the M.A. in 1978 and thereafter continuing in the Department of East Asian Languages and Civilizations to receive the Ph.D. in 1984. At Middlebury since 1986, he has taught history as well as philosophy until the present. Specializing in the intellectual history of China, with research most currently focused on the intersections between identity and violence and the nexuses between ethnicity and slavery, Wyatt is the author of The Blacks of Premodern China (2010) and Slavery in East Asia (2022), with the latter being a contribution to the Cambridge Elements Global Middle Ages series. Just completed in the same series is Song China and the World (Cambridge University Press, forthcoming).

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