Reprint

Religion and Folk Belief in Chinese Literature and Theatre

Edited by
November 2022
270 pages
  • ISBN978-3-0365-5409-9 (Hardback)
  • ISBN978-3-0365-5410-5 (PDF)

This is a Reprint of the Special Issue Religion and Folk Belief in Chinese Literature and Theatre that was published in

Social Sciences, Arts & Humanities
Summary

This edited volume offers a historical, textual and ethnoanthropological exploration of the meaning and value of religion and ritual and their form and function in relation to Chinese literature and theatre. The term ‘theatre’ is used here to refer broadly to various types of live performances—theatrical and non-theatrical; sacred and profane— presented in a religious setting, thus including ritual performance and oral performance. Likewise, literature in this volume broadly encompasses both written and oral literatures, including drama, poetry, hagiography, legend, mythology and prosimetric narrative or chantefable for telling and singing. The contributors to the issue draw on a wide range of materials from historical, philosophical and literary texts to field reports and archaeological finds to archived documents and local gazetteers to personal interviews and participant observations. While all the essays are collected under the theme of ‘Religion and Folk Belief in Chinese Literature and Theatre’, they differ from each other in subject matter, source material and research approach. Rich and varied as they are, these essays fall into two main categories, namely, a historical approach to religion and ritual recorded in (written and visual) texts and an integrated approach that combines historical inquiries into written and visual texts with ethnoanthropological fieldwork on religious rituals and associated performances.

Format
  • Hardback
License and Copyright
© 2022 by the authors; CC BY-NC-ND license
Keywords
Cheng 誠; cheng 成; sincerity; completion; religion; ritual; Classical Confucianism; literature; baojuan (precious scrolls); telling scriptures; scroll recitation; chinese folklore; popular religion; buddhist narrative; ritual; China; Xiud Yax Lus Qim (Yalu wang); Miao (Hmong) ethnic group; oral performance; ritual practice; sorcery and witchcraft; collective memory; cultural heritage; state presence; ritual; temple festival; temple theatre; Jiacun Double-Fourth Temple Festival; the Primordial Sovereign of the Morning Clouds (Bixia yuanjun); Shangdang; Liaozhai zhiyi; Daoism; dramas; Sichuan; willow; Yuan zaju; shamanism; legend; ritual; metaphor; Chinese religions; Chinese literature; Ming; Deng Zhimo; hagiography; Lü Dongbin; Xu Xun; Sa Shoujian; print culture; Daoism; Pei Yue; poems; Buddhism; monks; social association; Miao culture; ritual; performance studies; performance ethnography; indigenous studies; folk traditions; mythology; the Queen Mother of the West (Xiwangmu); Han rhapsody (fu); Han paintings; Hantomb stone reliefs; the Wuliang Shrine

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