Chinese Ritual and Politics
豆瓣
Emily Martin Ahern
简介
As a result of the strength and dominance of the centralized state, ritual action in China often takes its logic from political action. In this book Emily Ahern explores the implications of this. She argues that forms of control attempted ritually on non-human persons (gods and other spirits) in China parallel those forms of control which people regard as effective in ordinary life, namely political control, and draws important conclusions from this. She shows that in China it is possible to discard terms such as ‘magic’, which imply that acts directed to spirits operate on a different basis from acts in ordinary life. She also challenges claims in anthropology that, since they seem arbitrary and the actions of participants in them highly predictable, rituals support established authority. Her book will be of interest not only to specialists in Chinese studies, but to social anthropologists and others interested in the link between ritual and political processes.
目录
List of figures page vii
Acknowledgements ix
Introduction 1
Part I: Interpersonal Communication 7
1 Interpersonal versus non-interpersonal transaction 9
2 Written bureaucratic communication 16
3 Etiquette and control 31
Part II: Codes 43
4 Divination 45
5 Open and closed practices 64
Part III: Politics 75
6 Ritual and political authorities 77
7 Ritual as a learning game 92
Conclusions and further questions 109
Notes 111
Bibliography 120
Character list 129
Index 137