Practicing Salvation: Meat-Eating, Martyrdom, and Sacrifice as Religious Ideals in the Zhenkongjiao

IF 0.5 0 ASIAN STUDIES Journal of Chinese Religions Pub Date : 2022-05-01 DOI:10.1353/jcr.2022.0003
Esmond Chuah Meng Soh
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Abstract

Abstract:The Zhenkongjiao is a Chinese sectarian religion that was founded in Jiangxi in 1862. By the 1950s, the movement expanded into the lower Yangzi region, Guangdong province, and among the overseas Chinese in Southeast Asia. Unlike many sectarian religions and Buddhist movements in late-imperial and Republican China, the movement advocated non-vegetarianism and performed animal sacrifice. This article first sheds light on how the Zhenkongjiao’s promoters structured its belief system to address and challenge prevalent discourses of vegetarianism and nonkilling as markers of religious practice. I also propose that the Zhenkongjiao’s repertoire of thaumaturgical rituals—which include animal sacrifice—cannot be studied in isolation, but should be situated within a sectarian religious paradigm where sacrifice was exalted as a soteriological ideal. This study demonstrates the agency exercised by the Zhenkongjiao’s apologists, who appropriated and hybridized dominant religious discourses and cultural images characteristic of Republican China (1911–1949) to justify their beliefs and ritual systems.
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修行救赎:真空教的宗教理想——吃肉、殉道与牺牲
摘要:贞观教是1862年在江西创立的中国宗派宗教。到20世纪50年代,该运动扩展到长江下游地区、广东省和东南亚华侨中。与帝国后期和民国时期的许多宗派宗教和佛教运动不同,该运动提倡非素食主义,并进行动物祭祀。本文首先揭示了镇公教的推动者是如何构建其信仰体系的,以应对和挑战作为宗教实践标志的素食主义和非杀戮的流行话语。我还建议,不能孤立地研究镇孔教的湿婆仪式,其中包括动物献祭,而应该放在一个宗派宗教范式中,在这个范式中,献祭被尊为一种宗教理想。本研究展示了镇公教的辩护者所行使的代理权,他们挪用并混合了民国时期(1911–1949)的主流宗教话语和文化形象,以证明他们的信仰和仪式制度是合理的。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.10
自引率
11.10%
发文量
0
期刊介绍: The Journal of Chinese Religions is an international, peer-reviewed journal, published under the auspices of the Society for the Study of Chinese Religions (SSCR). Since its founding, the Journal has provided a forum for studies in Chinese religions from a great variety of disciplinary perspectives, including religious studies, philology, history, art history, anthropology, sociology, political science, archaeology, and literary studies. The Journal welcomes original research articles, shorter research notes, essays, and field reports on all aspects of Chinese religions in all historical periods. All submissions need to undergo double-blind peer review before they can be accepted for publication.
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