Cover image for Religious culture and violence in traditional China
Religious culture and violence in traditional China
Title:
Religious culture and violence in traditional China

Cambridge elements: Elements in religion and violence ; !x 2514-3786

Elements in religion and violence.
Author:
Haar, Barend ter, author.
ISBN:
9781108706230
Personal Author:
Physical Description:
78 pages ; 18 cm.
Series:
Cambridge elements: Elements in religion and violence ; !x 2514-3786

Elements in religion and violence.
Contents:
Setting the stage -- What is violence? -- The demonological substrate -- Messianic and millenarian traditions -- The enforcement of norms and social values -- Sacrifice and its counter-discourse -- Self-inflicted violence -- Intrareligious conflicts -- Concluding comments.
Abstract:
"The basis of Chinese religious culture, and with that many aspects of daily life, was the threat and fear of demonic attacks. These were inherently violent and could only be counteracted by violence as well-- even if this reactive violence was masked by euphemisms such as execution, expulsion, exorcisms and so on. At the same time, violence was a crucial dimension of the maintenance of norms and values, for instance in sworn agreements or in beliefs about underworld punishment. Violence was also an essential aspect of expressing respect through sacrificial gifts of meat (and in an earlier stage of Chinese culture also human flesh) and through a culture of auto-mutilation and ritual suicide. At the same time, conventional indigenous terms for violence such as bao were not used for most of these practices since they were not experienced as such, but rather justified as positive uses of physical force" -- Provided by publisher, page 4 of cover.
Bibliographical References:
Includes bibliographical references (pages 67-78).
Field 805:
npmlib 10900156 BL65 V55 H325 ysh
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