Masters of psalmody (bimo) : scriptural shamanism in Southwestern China

著者

    • Névot, Aurélie

書誌事項

Masters of psalmody (bimo) : scriptural shamanism in Southwestern China

by Aurélie Névot

(Religion in Chinese societies / edited by Kenneth Dean, Richard Madsen, David Palmer, v. 15)

Brill, c2019

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注記

Includes bibliographical references (p. [247]-258) and index

内容説明・目次

内容説明

In Masters of Psalmody (bimo) Aurelie Nevot analyses the religious, political and theoretical issues of a scriptural shamanism observed in southwestern China among the Yi-Sani. Her focus is on blood sacrifices and chants based on a secret and labile writing handled only by ritualists called bimo. Through ethnographic data, the author presents the still little known bimo metaphysics and unravels the complexity of the local text-based ritual system in which the continuity of each bimo lineage relies on the transmission of manuscripts whose writing relates to lineage blood. While illuminating the usages of this shamanistic tradition that is characterized by scriptural variability between patrilineages, Aurelie Nevot highlights the radical changes it is undergoing by becoming a Chinese state tradition.

目次

Foreword Acknowledgements Illustrations and Tables Notes to the Reader Introduction 1 Countercurrent Writing: Myths and Blood Lineages in Question Introduction: Yi-centrism versus Han-centrism 1 A Direction of Writing Contrary to Chinese Writing 2 Writing as a Mirrored Avatar and/or as an Expression of a Distinction of Identity? 3 "The Language of the Eyes" 4 Apparent Anarchy, Lineage Lability Conclusion: a Lineage Shamanistic Tradition 2 The Textual Chants of Bimo: Voicing the Written Space Introduction: Graphical Melodies 1 To Meow, to Screech like a Falcon, to Quack like a Wild Duck, to Utter the Chant of the Snake/Dead 2 To Write Then to Psalmodize: Becoming Bimo 3 Invisible Characters, Voice in Completion, Subtle Speech 4 Writing as a Psalmodic Chimera 5 The Written Reflexivity of Bimo Speech Conclusion: the Acoustic Life of Bimo Writing 3 The Physicality of Bimo Books: the Manuscript as a Psalmodic Mask Introduction: Manuscript as a Persona 1 The Space of the Book 2 A Canvas of Writing-Blood 3 Mountain-book, Hillside-pages 4 Facing "Two Cheeks" Conclusion: the Feminine of Writing 4 The Bimo's Bookish Journey: to Walk through Chanted Lines of Writing Introduction: Bimo Transhumances and Shamanistic Spatialities 1 To Ride, to Walk on Four Hands, to Whirl, to Flow 2 Parallelisms 3 A Concatenation of Textual Chant Conclusion: the Writing, Visible, as Access to the Vocalized Invisible Space 5 Bimo Ritual, nyi: Sacrificial Transsubstantiality Introduction: Blood Sacrifices 1 Setting Up the Ritual Framework 2 "To Build the Center" 3 To Become a mo (Sacrificial Animal) 4 "The Sacrificial Animal's Speech" Conclusion: Bloods 6 Achema: the Yi-Sani Apologue for the Art of Speaking Introduction: Vocal Co-Dehiscence and Social Reconfiguration 1 The Primacy of Speech 2 Chema: from Snake-Woman to Dead-Woman 3 The Mastery of Speech as a Social Issue, the Art of Speaking as Performance 4 To Imitate Nature's Babble Conclusion: Voices Echo 7 Bimo Religion as Intangible Cultural Heritage: the Process of Standardizing Writings and Chants Introduction: "Bimo Religion" bimo jiao 1 Bimo Qualification Certificate 2 From "Blood" to "Image" 3 Current Policies as Rooted in the 19th Century 4 To Rewrite: to Restructure the Writing Pages 5 From Lineage Writings to the Yi Writing of the Stone Forest County 6 From the Secrets of Initiated Men to State Secrets? 7 Bimo Music and Chants as Institutions of the Chinese State Conclusion: Se in the Process of Becoming wen? An Ongoing Shamanistic Schism Conclusion Bibliography Index

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