Bibliographic Information

Pilgrims and sacred sites in China

edited by Susan Naquin and Chün-fang Yü

(Studies on China, 15)

University of California Press, c1992

  • : cloth

Other Title

進香

Available at  / 29 libraries

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Note

Papers originally presented at a conference held at Bodega Bay, Calif. in Jan. 1989 and sponsored by the Joint Committee on Chinese Studies of the American Council of Learned Societies and the Social Science Research Council

Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Until now, China has been scarcely represented in the burgeoning comparative literature on pilgrimage. This volume remedies that omission, discussing the interaction between pilgrims and sacred sites from the tenth century to the present. From the perspectives of literature, art, history, religion, politics and anthropology, the essays focus on China's most famous pilgrimage mountains as well as lesser known sites.

Table of Contents

Introduction: Pilgrimage in China Women Pilgrims to T'ai Shan: Some Pages from a Seventeenth-Century Novel An Ambivalent Pilgrim to T'ai Shan in the Seventeenth Century Chang Shang-ying on Wu-t'ai Shan Relics and Flesh Bodies: The Creation of Ch'an Pilgrimage Sites P'u-t'o Shan: Pilgrimage and the Creation of the Chinese Potalaka Huang Shan Paintings as Pilgrimage Pictures The Pilgrimage to Wu-tang Shan The Peking Pilgrimage to Miao-feng Shan: Religious Organizations and Sacred Sites Reading the Chairman Mao Memorial Hall in Peking: The Tribulations of the Implied Pilgrim

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