Contenu du sommaire : Religious Reconfigurations in the People's Republic of China
Revue | China perspectives |
---|---|
Numéro | no 2009/4 |
Titre du numéro | Religious Reconfigurations in the People's Republic of China |
Texte intégral en ligne | Accessible sur l'internet |
Religious Reconfigurations in the People's Republic of China
- Editorial - Sébastien Billioud, David A. Palmer
- Religious Revival and Exit from Religion in Contemporary China - Benoît Vermander This paper examines both the revival of religious organisations and practices in China and what could be coined the “exit from religion” exemplified by the loss of religious basis for social togetherness and the instrumentalisation of religious organisations and discourse. It argues that “revival” and “exit” taken as a twofold phenomenon facilitate an understanding of the evolving and often disputed nature of China's religious sphere throughout history as well as the socio-political stage that the country is entering.
- China's Religious Danwei - David A. Palmer This article is a study of the continuities and changes in the state-led institutionalisation of religion in the PRC from 1979 to 2009 and their effects on the structuring of China's religious field. A normative discourse on religion is constituted by a network of Party leaders, officials, academics, and religious leaders. Official religious institutions have become hybrids of religious culture with the institutional habitus of work units ( danwei) in the socialist market economy. A wide range of religious practices have found legitimacy under secular labels such as health, science, culture, tourism, or heritage. Religious affairs authorities have begun to acknowledge the existence of this expanding realm of religious life, and to accord discursive legitimacy to the previously stigmatised or ignored categories of popular religion and new religions, but hesitate to propose an explicit change in policy.
- Temples and Daoists inUrban China Since 1980 - Goossaert Vincent, Ling Fang Since 1980, the revival of Daoist temples in China's urban environment has been developing in two different directions. On the one hand, “official” temples operated by the Daoist Association claim to embody a modern form of Daoism and offer a number of different religious services to the people. On the other hand, community temples refashion the religious life of neighbourhoods, often on the outskirt of cities. This article explores the complex relationships between these different kinds of temples, the lay groups who visit them, and the Daoist clergy who serve them.
- Rural Women, Old Age, and Temple Work - Xiaofei Kang This article examines the interface of religion, gender, and old age in contemporary China through the case of a group of rural Han elder women and their community temple in northwestern Sichuan. Without access to monastic resources and charismatic leadership, the women have made the temple a gendered ritual space of their own to obtain social company, spiritual comfort, and moral capital for themselves and their families. Neither victims of feudal superstition nor obstacles to modernisation, they are a dynamic transformative force in contemporary rural China.
- Raising the Quality of Belief - Cao Nanlai The paper addresses the changing dynamics of Protestantism in contemporary urban China through the lens of the Christian discourse of quality ( suzhi). Linking suzhiwith processes of identity and subject formation in the Chinese Protestant community, the paper shows that the religiosity of today's Chinese Protestants is not so much related to acts of spiritual seeking in a state-centred political framework as it is shaped by desires and practices of self-making among neoliberal individuals under rapid marketisation. It also demonstrates that Chinese Protestantism has undergone not just a quantitative increase but also a qualitative change that counters the one-dimensional representation of Christian religiosity in the post-Mao era.
- Social experimentation and “popular Confucianism” - Guillaume Dutournier, Zhe Ji The multiplicity of initiatives in China today that claim to be inspired by “Confucianism” calls for particular attention to the diversity of their practical application. In this case study, we analyse the formation and workings of a new kind of educational institution: initiated three years ago in the town of Tangchi (Anhui) by a Taiwanese Buddhist, but nonetheless strongly influenced by Confucian traditionalism, this “Cultural Education Centre” is inventing, somewhere between political control and moral proselytism, a new form of governmentality that could gain widespread acceptance.
- Lijiao: The Return of Ceremonies Honouring Confucius in Mainland China - Sébastien Billioud, Joël Thoraval Part of a larger project on the revival of Confucianism in Mainland China, this article explores the case of the Confucius ceremonies performed at the end of September each year in the city of Qufu, Shandong Province. In order to put things into perspective, it first traces the history of the cult at different periods of time. This is followed by a factual description of the events taking place during the so-called “Confucius festival,” which provides insight into the complexity of the issue and the variety of situations encountered. The contrast between the authorities and minjianConfucian revivalists, as well as their necessary interactions, ultimately illustrates the complex use and abuse of Confucius in post-Maoist China.
- Kang Xiaoguang: Social Science, Civil Society, and Confucian Religion - David Ownby This article examines the academic and intellectual career of Kang Xiaoguang, a prominent advocate of Confucianism and of the establishment of Confucianism as China's state religion. It argues that Kang's advocacy is rooted in a utilitarian vision of religion, and a pragmatic desire to encourage the development of healthy state-society relations in twenty-first century China.
Current Affairs
- The Petitioning System: A Major Challenge to “Social Harmony”? and Can Taiwan's opposition reconstruct itself? - Candice Tran Dai, Hubert Kilian Analysis by Candice Tran Dai based on:• Wu Yang, “Debate at the highest level of the CCP on the question of maintaining or abandoning the petition system,” Chengming, 2 May 2009• Yu Jianrong, “University specialisation in ‘petitions': What needs to be studied,” Nanfang Zhoumo, 10 June 2009Analysis by Hubert Kilian based on:• “Internal tensions in the DPP: Pandora's box opened in executive committee,” Lianhe bao - United Daily News, 9 June 2009, editorial pages.• “When Chen Chu was in prison fighting for independence, where was Tsai Ing-wen?,” Zhongguo shibao – China Times, 30 May 2009, editorial pages.• “Where Tsai Ing-wen failed, Chen Chu finds success,” Zhongguo shibao – China Times, 23 May 2009, editorial pages.
- The Petitioning System: A Major Challenge to “Social Harmony”? and Can Taiwan's opposition reconstruct itself? - Candice Tran Dai, Hubert Kilian
Review Essays
Book reviews
- Timothy Brook, Jérôme Bourgon, Gregory Blue, Death by a Thousand Cuts - Paul R. Katz
- Richard Madsen, Democracy's Dharma: Religious Renaissance and Political Development in Taiwan. - David A. Palmer
- Yoshiko Ashiwa and David L. Wank (eds), Making Religion, Making the, State. The Politics of Religion in Modern China - Sébastien Billioud
- David A. Palmer, Qigong Fever: Body, Science, and Utopia in China / La Fièvre du Quigong: guérison, religion, et politique en Chine, 1949-1999 - Georges Favraud
- Mayfair Mei-Hui Yang (ed.), Chinese Religiosities: Afflictions of Modernity and State Formation, - Julie Remoiville
- Qian Liqun, Jujue yiwang: “1957 nian xue” yanjiu biji (Refusal to forget: Notes for “1957 studies”) - Zhang Yinde
- Sergey Radchenko, Two Suns in the Heavens: The Sino-Soviet Struggle for Supremacy, 1962-1967 - Steven M. Goldstein
- Angus Maddison, Chinese Economic Performance in the Long Run; second edition revised and updated: 960-2030 AD - Jean-Paul Maréchal
- Kevin J. O'Brien (ed.), Popular Protest in China - Dorothy J. Solinger
- Laurence Roulleau-Berger and Guo Yuhua, Li Peilin, Liu Shiding (eds.), La nouvelle sociologie chinoise (New Chinese Sociology) - Aurore Merle
- Su Chi, Taiwan's Relations with Mainland China: A Tail Wagging Two Dogs - Jean-Pierre Cabestan