Few religious innovations have shaped Chinese history like the emergence of spirit-writing during the Song dynasty.
From a divinatory technique it evolved into a complex ritual practice used to transmit messages and revelations from the Gods. This resulted in the production of countless religious scriptures that now form an essential corpus, widely venerated and recited to this day, that is still largely untapped by research.
Using historical and ethnographic approaches, this volume for the first time offers a comprehensive overview of the history of spirit-writing, examining its evolution over a millennium, the practices and technologies used, and the communities involved.
Matthias Schumann is postdoctoral research fellow at Heidelberg University. His research deals with the interconnections between religion, society and politics in modern Chinese history. He is author of several articles and co-editor of Protecting the Weak in East Asia: Framing, Mobilisation and Institutionalisation (Routledge, 2018).
Elena Valussi is a senior Lecturer at Loyola University Chicago. She has published extensively on the intersection between religion, gender and the body in China, on Daoist intellectual history and on spirit writing in China. She is the Vice- President of the Society for the Study of Chinese Religions.
Acknowledgments List of Figures and Tables Note on Formal Conventions Dynastic Table
1 Introduction to the Volume
âMatthias Schumann and Elena Valussi
Part 1 Overview Papers
2 Making the Gods Write: A Short History of Spirit-Written Revelations in China, 1000â1400
âVincent Goossaert
3 Spirit-Writing Practices from the Song to Ming Periods and Their Relation to Politics and Religion
âWang Chien-chuan ç è¦å·
4 Women, Goddesses, and Gender Affinity in Spirit-Writing
âElena Valussi
Part 2 Changing Techniques and Practices
5 Terminology and Typology of Spirit-Writing in Early Modern China: A Preliminary Study
âHu Jiechen
Part 3 Spirit-Writing and the Literati Elites in Late Imperial China
7 Instantiating the Genealogy of the Way: Spirit-Writing in the Construction of Peng Dingqiuâs Confucian Pantheon
âDaniel Burton-Rose
8 A Credulous Skeptic: Ji Yun on the Mantic Arts and Spirit-Writing
âMichael Lackner
9 The Liu-Han Altar: Between a Literati Spirit-Writing Altar and Popular Religion
âZhu Mingchuan æ± æå·
Part 4 Spirit-Writing and Redemptive Societies
10 âProtecting the Dao and Transmitting the Classicsâ The New Religion to Save the World and the Confucian Dimension of Spirit-Writing in Republican China
âMatthias Schumann
11 Spirit-Writing and the Daoyuanâs Gendered Teachings
âXia Shi
12 The Phoenix Perches in the Land of the Kami: Spirit-Writing from Yiguandao to TendÅ
âNikolas Broy
Part 5 Local Communities and Transregional Networks
13 The Nineteenth Century Spirit-Writing Movement and the Transformation of Local Religion in Western Guangdong
âIchiko Shiga
14 The Rise of Spirit-Writing Cults in Chaozhou: Reassessing the Role of Charitable Halls
âLi Guoping æ åå¹³
15 Spirit-Writing Altars in Contemporary Hong Kong: A Case Study of Fei Ngan Tung Buddhism and Daoism Society
âLuo Dan ç¾ ä¸¹
16 A Motley Phoenix? On the Diversity of Spirit-Writing Temples and Their Practices in Puli, Taiwan
âPaul R. Katz
Index
Essential reading for scholars working in the fields of Chinese religion, the history of Confucianism, Daoism, Buddhism, and popular religion. Also of interest to scholars of comparative studies, Chinese literature and of late imperial and Republican history.