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谭其骧历史地理讲座 演讲题目:从明代大礼议参与者建祠看明中期祠祭的发展 主讲人:David William FAURE(科大卫)教授 时间:2018年3月30日(周五),15:30—17:30 地点:光华楼西主楼史地所2201会议室 主持人:王振忠教授 讲者简介: David William FAURE (科大卫)教授,普林斯顿大学博士(1976),历任香港中文大学历 史系讲师 (1976—1989)、印第安那大学历史与东亚语言文化系教授 (1990)、牛津大学中国 近代史讲师、圣安东尼学院院士(1990—)等,现为香港中文大学历史系讲座教授、维伦研究教 授 (2004—)。出版有《明清社会与礼仪》(北京师范大学出版社,2016)、Emperor and Ancestor: State and Lineage in South China( Stanford University Press 2007;中文译本 《皇帝与祖宗》,江苏人民出版社,2009.)等论著。 David William FAURE (科大卫)教授简历 教育: B.A. (1st class) 1969, 香港大学 Ph.D. 1976, 普林斯顿大学 工作: 香港中文大学历史系讲师 1976 - 1989 印第安那大学历史与东亚语言文化系教授 1990 牛津大学中国近代史讲师,圣安东尼学院院士 1990 - 2006 牛津大学圣安东尼学院荣休院士 2006香港中文大学历史系讲座教授,维伦研究教授 2004 -. 著作: 1. 《明清社会与礼仪》, 北京:北京师范大学出版社,2016。 2. The Fisher Folk of Late Imperial and Modern China: An Historical Anthropology of Boatand-Shed Living, co-edited with He Xi 贺喜, London: Routledge, 2016. 3. Chieftains into Ancestors: Imperial Expansion and Indigenous Society in Southwest China, co-edited with Ho Ts’ui-p’ing 何翠萍, Vancouver: University of British Columbia Press, 2013. 4. 近代中国商业发展,杭州:浙江大学出版社, 2010. 5. Emperor and Ancestor: State and Lineage in South China, Stanford: Stanford University Press 2007. (《皇帝与祖宗》,南京:江苏人民出版社,2009.) 6. China and Capitalism, A History of Business Enterprise in Modern China, Hong Kong: Hong Kong University Press 2006. 1 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. A Documentary History of Hong Kong, vol. 3 Economy, co-editor (with Pui-tak Lee), Hong Kong: Hong Kong University Press, 2004. Colonialism and the Hong Kong Mentality, Hong Kong: Centre of Asian Studies, University of Hong Kong, 2003. In Search of the Hunters and Their Tribes, Studies in the History and Culture of the Taiwan Indigenous People, editor, Taipei: Shung Ye Museum of Formosan Aborigines, 2001. Town and Country in China: Identity and Perception, co-editor (with Tao Tao Liu), Basingstoke: Palgrave (St Antony’s-Macmillan series), 2001. A Documentary History of Hong Kong, vol. 2 Society, editor, Hong Kong: Hong Kong University Press, 1997. Unity and Diversity: Local Cultures and Identities in China, co-editor (with Tao Tao Liu), Hong Kong: Hong Kong University Press, 1996. Down to Earth: the Territorial Bond in South China, co-editor (with Helen Siu), Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1995. The Rural Economy of Pre-Liberation China: Trade Expansion and Peasant Livelihood in Jiangsu and Guangdong, 1870 to 1937, Hong Kong: Oxford University Press, 1989. The Structure of Chinese Rural Society, Lineage and Village in the Eastern New Territories of Hong Kong, Hong Kong: Oxford University Press, 1986. 《香港碑铭汇编》, principal editor, co-edited with Bernard H.K.Luk and Alice Ng, Hong Kong: Hong Kong Museum of History, 1986, in three volumes. From Village to City, Studies in the Traditional Roots of Hong Kong Society, principal editor, co-edited with James Hayes and Alan Birch, Hong Kong: Centre of Asian Studies, University of Hong Kong, 1984. 文章: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. “The secret society’s secret: the invoked reality of the Tiandihui,” Frontiers of History in China, 11:4, 2016, pp. 510-531. “The introduction of economics in China, 1850-2010,” in Vincent Groossaert, Jan Kiely, and John Lagerwey, eds. Modern Chinese Relgiion II, 1850-2015, Leiden: Brill, 2016, pp. 65-88. “Charity donations from Hong Kong to China in connection with health and medical services,” in Lincoln C. Chen, Anthony J. Saich and Jennifer Ryan, eds. Philanthropy for Health in China, Bloomington: Indiana University Press, forthcoming. “Commercial institutions and practices in imperial China as seen by Weber and in terms of more recent research,” Taiwan Journal of East Asian Studies, vol. 10, no. 2, 2013, pp. 7198. “The tusi that never was: find an ancestor, connect to the state,” in David Faure and He Ts’ui-p’ing, eds. Chieftains into Ancestors: Imperial Expansion and Indigenous Society in Southwest China, Vancouver: University of British Columbia Press, 2013, pp. 171-186 “Zhongguo zichan jieji zai tantao -- shangye jiegou, zhengzhi diwei ji shehui jieceng de maoqi,” (The Chinese bourgeoisie reconsidered: business structure, political status and the emergence of social class), in Li Peide, ed. Da guodu, shidai bianju zhong de zhongguo shangren (The great transformation: Chinese merchants in a time of change), Hong Kong: Shangwu, 2013, pp. 30-53. 2 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. “From people (min) to society (shehui): the social transformation of daily life in twentiethcentury China,” Donghai lishi yanjiu jikan, vol. 1, 2013, pp. 3-12. “Jiangou ershi shiji de Zhongguo putongren” (Constructing the ordinary person in twentieth-century China), in Lu Fangshang, ed. Huipan shiji lu, jianguo bainian lishi jiangzhu (Lecture series on the Republic of China: a centennial history), Taipei: Academia Historica, Huipan shiji lu, jianguo bainian lishi jiangzhu, Taipei: Academia Historica, 2012, pp. 53-65 (with Elisabeth Koll), “China: the indigenization of insurance,” in Peter Borscheid and Niels Viggo Haueter, eds. World Insurance, the Evolution of a Global Risk Network, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2012, pp. 472-494. “A historical view of Chinese entrepreneurship,” in Chikako Usui, ed. Comparative Entrepreneurship Initiatives, Studies in China, Japan and the USA, Houndmills, Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2011, pp 15-35 “Cong ‘Qinming dayu lu’ kan Ming zhongye de huzhi, shenfen yu chengshi shenghuo,” (A view of mid-Ming household, status and city life from the Imperial Clarification of the Great Imprisonment), in Zhao Shiyu, ed. Da he shangxia: 10 shiji yilai de beifang chengxiang yu minzong shenghuo, Taiyuan: Shanxi renmin chubanshe, 2010, pp. 3-13. “Preface” in Zhuang Yingchang and Jian Meiling, eds. Kejia de xingcheng yu bianqian (The Hakka: formation and transformation), Hsinchu, Taiwan: National Chiao Tung University Press, 2011, pp. v-viii. “Images of mother: the place of women in south China,” in Helen F. Siu, ed. Merchants’ Daughters, Women, Commerce, and Regional Culture in South China, Hong Kong: Hong Kong University Press, 2010, pp. 45-58. “Rethinking colonialism in Hong Kong,” in Elizabeth Sinn, Wong Siu-lun and Chang Wing-hoi, eds. Rethinking Hong Kong: New Paradigms, New Perspectives, Hong Kong: Centre of Asian Studies, University of Hong Kong, 2009, pp. 83-99. “A short rejoinder,” (in Chinese, with Liu Zhiwei), Lishi renleixue xuekan, vol. 7, no. 2, 2009, pp. 165-166. “Hakka,” Encyclopedia of Modern China, Detroit: Charles Scribner & Sons, 2009, pp. 173-174. “Lin Zexu,” Encyclopedia of Modern China, Detroit: Charles Scribner & Sons, 2009, pp. 491-492. “Women zai liushi niandai zhangdai de ren (Those of us who grew up in the 1960s),” in Huang Ailing and Li Peide, eds. Lengzhan yu Xianggang dianying (The Cold War and Hong Kong Films), Hong Kong: Hong Kong Film Archives, 2009, pp. 13-19. “Beyond networking: an institutional view of Chinese business,” in Medha Kudaisya and Ng Chin-keong, eds. Chinese and Indian Business, Historical Antecedents, Leiden: Brill, 2009, pp. 31-59. “Standardization or legitimation? Perception of the unity of Chinese culture from the standpoint of popular beliefs,” (in Chinese, with Liu Zhiwei), Lishi renleixue xuekan, vol. 6, nos. 1-2 combined, 2008, pp. 1-21. “Rethinking colonial institutions, standards, life styles and experiences,” in Helen F. Siu and Agnes S. Ku, eds. Hong Kong Mobile, Making a Global Population, Hong Kong: Hong Kong University Press, 2008, pp. 231-246. “Hexin yu bianyuan: Ming-Qing dao Minguo shiqi chengxiang guangan de bianhua (Centre and periphery, changes in Ming-Qing to Republican urban-rural perceptions),” in 3 Qiao Jian, ed. Dibian jieji yu bianyuan shehui: chuantong yu xiandai, Taipei: Lixu wenhua, 2007, pp. 47-60. 23. “Commercial cases in a local court diary,” 80-Year History of the Toyo Bunko, Tokyo: Toyo Bunko 2007, pp. 18-23. 24. “La solution lignagere: la revolution rituelle du xvie siecle et ltat imperial chinois,” Annales, Histoire, Sciences, Sociales 2006, 61:6, pp. 1291-1316. 25. “The Yao Wars in the mid-Ming and their impact on Yao ethnicity,” in Pamela Kyle Crossley, Helen Siu and Donald Sutton, eds. Empire at the Margins: Culture, Ethnicity and Frontier in Early Modern China, Berkeley: University of California Press, 2006, pp. 171-189. 26. “Renleixue yu Zhongguo jindai shehui shi: yingxiang yu qianjing,” (Anthropology and modern Chinese social history: impact and prospects), Dongwu lishi xuebao, vol. 14, 2005, pp. 21-36. 27. “Shanxi piaohao de xingqi yu moluo,”(The rise and decline of the Shanxi banks), Guangming ribao, Nov 22, 2005. 28. “The common people in Hong Kong history: their livelihood and aspirations until the 1930s,” in Lee Pui-tak, ed. Colonial Hong Kong and Modern China, Interaction and Reintegration, Hong Kong: Hong Kong University Press, 2005, pp. 9-37. 29. “Between house and home, the family in south China,” in Ronald G. Knapp and Kai-yin Lo, eds. House Home and Family: Living and Being Chinese, Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press, 2005. 30. “Huigu liuling niandai,” (Remembering the 1960s), Li Guangxiong, et.al., eds. Lishi yu wenhua: Xianggang gongkai jiangzuo wenji (Essays from the Public Lectures on Research on Hong Kong History), Hong Kong: The Hong Kong Public Library, 2005, pp. 185-198. 31. “The local official in commercial litigation in early nineteenth-century China,” University of Tokyo Journal of Law and Politics, 2004, vol. 1, pp. 144-155. 32. “Gaobie Huanan yanjiu” (Farewell South China studies), Hua?an yanjiu hui, eds. Xuebu yu chaoyue, Huanan yanjiu hui lunwen ji, Hong Kong: Wenhua chuangzao chubanshe, 2004, pp. 9-30. 33. “The original translocal society and its modern fate: historical and post-reform south China,” Provincial China 8:1, 2003, pp. 40-59; reprinted in Tim Oakes and Louisa Schein, eds. Translocal China, Linkages, Identities, and the Reimagining of Space, London: Routledge, 2006, pp. 36-55. 34. “Citang yu jiamiao: cong Song mo dao Ming zhongye zongzu liyi de yanbian,” (Ancestral halls and family temples: the evolution of lineage rituals from the end of the Song to the mid-Ming), Lishi renleixue xuebao 1:2, 2003, pp. 1-20. 35. “The Heaven and Earth Society in the nineteenth century: an interpretation,” in Kwangching Liu and Richard Shek, eds. Heterodoxy in Late Imperial China, Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press, 2004, pp. 365-392. 36. “Recreating the indigenous identity in Taiwan: cultural aspirations in their social and economic environment,” in David Blundell, ed. Austronesian Taiwan, Linguistics, History, Ethnology, Prehistory, Berkeley and Taipei: Phoebe A. Hearst Museum of Anthropology, University of California, and Shung Ye Museum of Formosan Aborigines, 2000, pp. 97130. 37. “Zhongguo de ziben zhuyi mengya,” (The sprouts of capitalism in China), Zhongguo jingjishi yanjiu, 2001, vol. 1, pp. 57-67. 4 38. “Higher education reforms and intellectual schizophrenia in Hong Kong,” Ritsumeikan Journal of Asia Pacific Studies, volume 8, 2001, pp. 80-86. 39. “The mountain tribes before the Japanese occupation,” in Faure, In Search of the Hunters and Their Tribes, Studies in the History and Culture of the Taiwan Indigenous People, 2001, pp. 5-27. 40. “What Weber did not know: towns and economic development in Ming and Qing China,” in Faure and Liu, Town and Country in China: Identity and Perception, 2001, pp. 58-84. 41. “It takes a sage .... Notes on land and lineage at Sima Guang’s grave in Xia county, Shanxi province,” in Minsu quyi 131, 2001, pp. 27-56. 42. “State and rituals in modern China: comments on the “Civil society’ debate,” in Ch’iu-kuei Wang, Ying-chang Chuang and Chung-min Chen, eds. Proceedings of the International Conference on Society, Ethnicity and Cultural Performance, Taipei: Centre for Chinese Studies, 2001, pp. 509-536. 43. "Contractual arrangements and the emergence of a land market in the Pearl River delta, 1500 to 1800," in Chen Qiukun and Hong Liwan, eds. Qiyue wenshu yu shehui shenghuo (1600-1900) (Written contracts and social life, 1600-1900), Taipei: Institute of Taiwan History (Preparatory Office), Academia Sinica, 2001, pp. 265-284. 44. “The Mackay Treaty of 1902 and Its Impact on Chinese Business ,” Asia Pacific Business Review, 2000, 7:2, pp. 81-92. 45. “Dongluan, guanfu yu difang shehui, du ?inkai Lu?n fuzhi ji bei’” (Disturbance, government and local society, a study of the ?tele on the Newly Founded Lu?n Prefecture’), Zhongshan daxue xuebao, 2000 no. 2, pp. . 66-73. 46. “Zongzu yu difang shehui de guojia rentong -- Ming-Qing Hua’nan zongzu fazhan de yishi xingtai jichu” (Lineage and the identification of state with local society -- the ideological foundations of lineage development in Ming and Qing south China), co-authored with Liu Zhiwei, Lishi yanjiu 2000:3 pp. 3-14. 47. “The Chinese emperor’s informal empire: religion and the incorporation of local society in the Ming,” in Shu-min Huang and Cheng-kuang Hsu, eds. Imagining China: Regional Division and National Unity, Taipei: Institute of Ethnology, Academia Sinica, 1999, pp. 21-41. 48. “Yingguo cang yapian zhanzheng hou youguan Xianggang he Guangzhou de Hanwen lishi wenjian juyu” (Some Chinese historical documents held in Britain on Hong Kong and Guangzhou after the Opium War), in Bai Hua, ed. Qingzhu Wang Zonghan jiaoshou bashi wu ji Wei Qingyuan jiaoshou qishi huadan xueshu lunwen heji (Festschrift on the occasion of Professor Wang Zonghan? eighty-fifth and Professor Wei Qingyuan? seventieth birthday), Hefei: Huangshan shushe, 1999, pp. 467-471. 49. “Guojia yu liyi: Song zhi Qing zhongye Zhujiang sanjiaozhou difang shehui de guojia rentong,” (State and ritual: identification with the state in the local society of the Pearl River delta from the Song to the mid-Qing), Zhongshan daxue xuebao, shehui kexue ban, vol. 39, 1999:5, pp. 65-72. 50. “The Emperor in the village, representing the state in south China,” in Joseph McDermott, ed. Court Ritual and Politics in China, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1999, pp. 267-298. 51. “Ming Jiajing chunian Guangdong tixue Wei Xiao hui yinci zhi qianyin houguo ji qi dui Zhujiang sanjue zhou de yinxiang,” (Guangdong Education Intendant Wei Xiao? destruction of illegal temples in the early Jiajing period, causes and its cosequences on the 5 Pearl River Delta), in Zhou Tianyou, ed. Diyu shehui yu chuantong Zhongguo (Local society and traditional China), Xian: Xibei daxue chuban she, 1995, pp. 129-134 (in Chinese). 52. “Reflections on being Chinese in Hong Kong,” in Judith M. Brown and Rosemary Foot eds. Hong Kong? Transitions, 1842-1997, Macmillan, 1997. 53. “Company law and the emergence of the modern firm,” in Rajeswary Ampalavanar Brown, ed. Chinese Business Enterprise, First Edition, London: Routledge, 1996, vol. 4 pp. 263281. 54. “The Power and Limit of the Private Contract in Ming-Qing China and Today, with A. Pang, in L.M. Douw and P. Post, eds. South China: State Culture and Social Change during the 20th Century, Amsterdam: Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences, 1996, pp. 57-67; also reprinted in Rajeswary Ampalavanar Brown, ed. Chinese Business Enterprise, First Edition, vol. 4, pp. 282-296. 55. "Becoming Cantonese, the Ming dynasty transition," in Liu and Faure, Unity and Diversity. 56. "Lineage Socialism and Community Control: Tangang Xiang in the 1920s and 1930s", in Faure and Siu, eds. Down to Earth 57. "Guangdong Province, a brief history", in Brian Hook, ed. Regional Development in China: Guangdong, Hong Kong: Oxford University Press, 1996, pp. 1-29. 58. "The control of equity in Chinese firms within the modern sector from the late Qing to the early Republic," in Rajeswary Ampalavanar Brown, ed. Chinese Business Enterprise in Asia, London: Routledge, 1995, pp. 60-79. 59. "An exploratory study of Pingshan, a Hakka village cluster to the east of Shenzhen," in The Proceedings of the International Conference on Hakkaology, eds. Qiao Jian and Zheng Chiyan, Hong Kong: Xianggang Yatai yanjiusuo haiwai huaren yanjiushe, Xianggang zhongwen daxue, 1994, pp. 345-355. 60. "Ownership versus control, the upturns and downswings of the Chinese economy," The Times Higher Education Supplement, November 26, 1993, p. 23. 61. "Bu Luo Xianglin jiaoshou zhi youguan Xinjie dazu yanjiu," (A supplement to Professor Lo Hsiang-lin's research on the big lineages of the New Territories" (in Chinese), in Zhuhai wenshi yanjiusuo xuehui, ed. Luo Xianglin jiaoshou jinian lunwenji (Essays in Commemoration of Professor Lo Hsiang-lin), Taibei: Xin Wenfeng, 1992, pp. 517-527. 62. "The written and the unwritten: the political agenda of the written genealogy," Institute of Modern History, Academia Sinica, Family Process and Political Process in Modern Chinese History, Taipei: Institute of Modern History, Academia Sinica, 1992, pp. 261-298. 63. "Cong Xianggang Xinjie xiangcun diaocha suojian Ming-Qing xiangcun shehui de yanbian," (Changes in Ming-Qing village society from village surveys in the New Territories of Hong Kong), Ye Xian'en, ed. Qingdai quyue shehui qingji yanjiu (Studies of regional society and economy in the Qing period), Beijing: Zhonghua 1992, pp. 478-485. 64. "The man the emperor decapitated", Journal of the Hong Kong Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society, 1990, vol. 28, pp. 198-203. 65. "A note on the lineage in business", Chinese Business History, April 1991, pp. 1-3. 66. "The rice trade in Hong Kong before the Second World War", in Elizabeth Sinn, ed. Between East and West, Aspects of Social and Political Development in Hong Kong, Hong Kong: Centre of Asian Studies, University of Hong Kong, 1990, pp. 216-225. 67. "What made Foshan a town? The evolution of rural-urban identities in Ming-Qing China", Late Imperial China, (1990) 11:2, pp. 1-31. 6 68. "Folk religion in Hong Kong and the New Territories today", in Julian Pas, ed. The Turning of the Tide: the Religious Situation in Today's China, Hong Kong: Hong Kong Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society, 1989. 69. "The lineage as business company: patronage versus law in the development of Chinese business", The Second Conference on Modern Chinese Economic History, Taibei, 1989, vol. 1, pp. 347-376; also reprinted in Rajeswary Ampalavanar Brown, ed. Chinese Business Enterprise, First Edition, vol. 1, pp. 82-106. 70. "Custom in the legal process: the inheritance of land and houses in south China", Proceedings of the 10th International Symposium on Asian Studies, 1989, pp. 477-488. 71. "The lineage as a cultural invention: the case of the Pearl River delta," Modern China vol. 15 no. 1, 1989, pp. 4-36. 72. "Notes on the history of Tsuen Wan", Journal of the Hong Kong Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society 1984, vol. 24, pp. 46-104. 73. "Village accounts, a preliminary study", Proceedings of the 8th International Symposium on Asian Studies, 1986, pp. 561-72. 74. "The plight of the farmers, a study of the rural economy of Jiangsu and the Pearl River delta, 1870-1937", Modern China, 1985, vol. 2 no. 1, pp. 3-37. 75. "Lineage, village and alliance: the territorial organization of mainland New Territories", Proceedings of the Sixth International Symposium on Asian Studies, 1984, Hong Kong: Asian Research Service. 76. "The Tangs of Kam Tin -- a hypothesis on the rise of a gentry family", in David Faure, James Hayes, Alan Birch eds. op.cit., pp. 24-42. 77. "The Hong Kong region according to historical inscriptions", with Bernard H.K. Luk and Alice Ngai-ha Lun Ng, in David Faure, James Hayes, Alan Birch eds. op.cit. pp. 43-54. 78. "Lun yijiu yiling niandai Xinjie qu de shizi lu” (The literacy rate of the New Territories in the 1910s), in Chinese, Ming Bao Monthly (Hong Kong), Feb. 1983, pp. 89-92 (abstracted from a paper presented at the AAS annual conference in Chicago 1982). 79. "Saikung, the making of the district and its experience during World War II", Journal of the Hong Kong Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society, 1982 vol. 22, pp. 161-216. 80. “The Po Tak Temple in Sheung Shui Market,” (with Lee Lai-mui), Journal of the Hong Kong Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society, 1982 vol. 22, pp. 271-279. 81. "Landlords and farm management: comments on Ching Su and Lo Lun, Ch'ing-tai Shan-tung ching-ying ti-chu ti she-hui hsing-chih (Tsinan, 1959), translated into English by Endymion Wilkinson as Landlord and Labour in Late Imperial China, Case Studies from Shandong (Camb. Mass., 1978)", Journal of the Institute of Chinese Studies of the Chinese University of Hong Kong, 1980, vol. 11, pp. 303-13. 82. "Hong Kong and China in the village world", Journal of the Hong Kong Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society 1981 pp. 187-91. 83. "Paying for convenience: an aspect of corruption that arises from revenue spending", Rance P.L. Lee ed., Corruption and Its Control in Hong Kong (Hong Kong: Chinese University Press), pp. 133-165, reprinted in the Philippine Journal of Public Administration, xxiv: 2 (1980). 84. "Land deeds from Hsiangtung Village", in Chinese, with Bernard H.K. Luk, Journal of the Institute of Chinese Studies of the Chinese University of Hong Kong, 1980, 11, pp. 141-62. 85. "Neglected historical sources on the late Ch'ing and the early Republican rural economy", Ch'ing-shih wen-t'i 1979, vol. 4, pp. 58-93. 7 86. "The rural economy of Kiangsu Province, 1870-1911," Journal of the Institute of Chinese Studies of the Chinese University of Hong Kong 1978, pp. 365-471. 87. "Rural marketing in China's economic development", Proceedings of the Seventh International Association of the Historians of Asia Conference, 22nd-26th August, 1977, Bangkok, 1977. 88. "Land tax collection in Kiangsu Province in the late Ch'ing period", Ch'ing-shih wen-t'i, 1976, 3: 6, pp. 49-75. 8

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