Religious and ethnic revival in a Chinese minority : the Bai people of Southwest China

Bibliographic Information

Religious and ethnic revival in a Chinese minority : the Bai people of Southwest China

Liang Yongjia

(Routledge contemporary Asia series)

Routledge, 2020 , c2018

  • : pbk.

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. 157-168) and index

"First published 2018" "First issued in paperback 2020" --t.p. verso

Description and Table of Contents

Description

This book is based on anthropological fieldwork among the Bai, an ethnic minority with a population of two million in Dali, southwest China. It explores the religious and ethnic revival in the last two decades against a historical background. It explains why and how religions and ethnic identity are revived in contemporary China, with the revived analytical concept of "alterity", which suggests a world beyond here and now. The book focuses on the particular institutions and ritual technologies that seek for access to the invisible, transcendental other-both spatial and temporal. It covers a variety of topics, including pre-modern kingship, modern utopia, religious alterity, ethnic identity, religious associations, the Intangible Cultural Heritage, and temple restorations.

Table of Contents

Introduction, Chapter 1 Situating the Field, Chapter 2 Removing Religions in the 1950s and the early 1960s, Chapter 3 Introducing Ethnicity: The Promise of the Utopian Alterity, Chapter 4 Ethnicity Perpetuated: Nanzhao History between China and Thailand, Chapter 5 Religious Revival in Dali and Xizhou, Chapter 6 Culturalization of religion and ethnicity, Chapter 7 Temple lost, Temple Regained: The Sacred Public Space, Conclusion

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