Muslim Sanzijing : shifts and continuities in the definition of Islam in China
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Muslim Sanzijing : shifts and continuities in the definition of Islam in China
(China studies / editors, Glen Dudbridge, Frank Pieke, v. 34)
Brill, c2016
- : hardback
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Note
Includes bibliographical references (p. [223]-237)
Description and Table of Contents
Description
In Muslim Sanzijing, Shifts and Continuities in the Definition of Islam in China (1710-2010) Roberta Tontini traces the development of Islam and Islamic law in the country, while responding to two enduring questions in China's intellectual history: How was the Muslim sharia reconciled with Confucianism? How was knowledge of Islamic social and ritual norms popularized to large segments of Chinese Muslim society even in periods of limited literacy?
Through a comprehensive study that includes a rigorous analysis of popular Chinese Islamic primers belonging to the Sanzijing tradition, Tontini offers fresh insights on the little known intellectual and legal history of Islam on Chinese soil to convincingly demonstrate its evolving quality in response to changing social norms.
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments
Chapter 1. Introduction
Motivation and Relevance
Literature Review
Roadmap
Conceptual Definitions
Chapter 2. Tianfang Dianli: Norms and Rites of Islamic Law in Imperial China
Introduction: Legal Traditions in Cultural Convergence
Hanafi Regionalism and the Chinese "Sunna"
Rethinking Jurisprudence
The Chinese Sharia
Confucian Frameworks of Islamic Jurisprudence
Conclusion: Islamic Law in Cultural Translation
Chapter 3. Tianfang Sanzijing: A Regional(ist) Theory on Islamic Law
Introduction: Liu Zhi and Yuan Guozuo's Joint Intellectual Enterprise
Coming of Age in Chinese Islamic Literacy
Wugong: From Religious Pillars to Social Bricks
Rite and Law in the "Great Learning" of Islam
Traditions as Cradles of Transitions: Establishing Regionalism in Chinese Islamic Law
Conclusion: The "Filiative Transmission" of Islam in China
Chapter 4. Islamic Law in the Aftermath of the Anti-Qing Rebellions
Introduction: Novel Texts for Rebellious Contexts
Beginning, Unfolding and Indigenizing the Transmission
Rethinking Orthodoxy
"Ways" of Islam in a Changing Society
New Perspectives on Social Order
Conclusion: The Legacy of Two Primers
Chapter 5. Rethinking Liu Zhi's Legacy in Postimperial China
Introduction: Islam in Transition
Strengthening the Chinese Nation: Hu Songshan's Three Character Primer of Islam
China's "Muslim Brothers": A Regional Trajectory
Red Star over Muslims: Hu Xueliang's Sanzijing for Girls
"Love Your Country, Love Your Religion": Na Guochang's Sequel to the Tianfang Sanzijing
Chapter 6. Islam's Filiative Transmission to Modernity
Conclusion: The Great Learning of Islam in China
Works Cited
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