Shamans, Souls, and Soma: Comparative Religion and Early China

IF 0.5 0 ASIAN STUDIES Journal of Chinese Religions Pub Date : 2020-11-01 DOI:10.1353/jcr.2020.0010
N. Williams
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引用次数: 6

Abstract

Abstract:One important innovation in twentieth-century sinology was the borrowing of the term “shamanism” to apply to early Chinese religion. While many scholars have employed this cross-cultural framework, others have rejected this use of the term “shamanism” for Chinese wu 巫 as excessively broad and ideologically biased. These debates too often are framed in broadly nationalistic terms as questions about whether “China” could have had something so exotic in a particular era. In fact, it is very often the case that a particular practice or belief is confined to a certain region at a particular time, or even to a specific substratum of a culture therein. This becomes clear when the “shamanism” problem of ancient Chu is reexamined in light of concomitant issues of personal identity, as represented by various terms for “souls,” or material culture, as represented by “soma” and other plants employed in religious ritual. I argue for the efficacy of cross-cultural analogies in understanding even phenomena which are singular to China. The limited but real utility of these analogies lies in their potential to help us construe the multiplicity within early Chinese religion that is obscured by a Sinocentric perspective.
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萨满、灵魂与索玛:比较宗教与早期中国
摘要:20世纪汉学的一个重要创新是借用“萨满教”一词来描述中国早期的宗教。虽然许多学者采用了这种跨文化的框架,但也有一些人反对将“萨满教”一词用于中国巫巫,认为它过于宽泛,而且带有意识形态上的偏见。这些辩论往往被广泛地用民族主义的措辞框定,质疑在一个特定的时代,“中国”是否能拥有如此具有异国情调的东西。事实上,一种特定的实践或信仰往往局限于特定时间的特定地区,甚至局限于其中的特定文化基础。当古代楚国的“萨满教”问题被重新审视时,这一点就变得清晰起来,因为它伴随着个人身份的问题,如“灵魂”的各种术语所代表的,或物质文化,如“唆麻”和其他用于宗教仪式的植物所代表的。我认为跨文化类比在理解中国特有的现象方面是有效的。这些类比的有限但真正的用途在于,它们有可能帮助我们解释早期中国宗教中被中国中心主义观点所掩盖的多样性。
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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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