Robert Hymes
Way and Byway
Taoism, Local Religion, and Models of Divinity in Sung and Modern China
A Philip E. Lilienthal Book in Asian Studies
381 pages, 6 x 9 inches, 1 line illustration, 8 maps
May 2002, Available worldwide
Categories: Religion; Anthropology; Taoism; History; Asian History; China
May 2002, Available worldwide
Categories: Religion; Anthropology; Taoism; History; Asian History; China
"Only Robert Hymes could have produced such a vivid, fascinating portrait of a Taoist mountain, with its immortals, its clergy, and its devotees. Extensive translations of poetry, ghost stories, and canonical sources make it possible for the first time to glimpse the richness of life in a Taoist community in the distant past."—Valerie Hansen, author of The Open Empire: A History of China to 1600
Using a combination of newly mined Sung sources and modern ethnography, Robert Hymes addresses questions that have perplexed China scholars in recent years. Were Chinese gods celestial officials, governing the fate and fortunes of their worshippers as China's own bureaucracy governed their worldly lives? Or were they personal beings, patrons or parents or guardians, offering protection in exchange for reverence and sacrifice?
To answer these questions Hymes examines the professional exorcist sects and rising Immortals' cults of the Sung dynasty alongside ritual practices in contemporary Taiwan and Hong Kong, as well as miracle tales, liturgies, spirit law codes, devotional poetry, and sacred geographies of the eleventh through thirteenth centuries. Drawing upon historical and anthropological evidence, he argues that two contrasting and contending models informed how the Chinese saw and see their gods. These models were used separately or in creative combination to articulate widely varying religious standpoints and competing ideas of both secular and divine power. Whether gods were bureaucrats or personal protectors depended, and still depends, says Hymes, on who worships them, in what setting, and for what purposes.
To answer these questions Hymes examines the professional exorcist sects and rising Immortals' cults of the Sung dynasty alongside ritual practices in contemporary Taiwan and Hong Kong, as well as miracle tales, liturgies, spirit law codes, devotional poetry, and sacred geographies of the eleventh through thirteenth centuries. Drawing upon historical and anthropological evidence, he argues that two contrasting and contending models informed how the Chinese saw and see their gods. These models were used separately or in creative combination to articulate widely varying religious standpoints and competing ideas of both secular and divine power. Whether gods were bureaucrats or personal protectors depended, and still depends, says Hymes, on who worships them, in what setting, and for what purposes.
Joseph Levenson Book Prize - Pre 1900, China and Inner Asia Council of the Association for Asian Studies
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Dao De Jing: The Book of the Way, by Laozi
Taoism and the Arts of China, by Stephen Little
Early Daoist Scriptures, by Stephen R. Bokenkamp
The Taoist Body, by Kristofer Schipper
The Sinister Way: The Divine and the Demonic in Chinese Religious Culture, by Richard von Glahn
Early Daoist Scriptures, by Stephen R. Bokenkamp
Fountain of Fortune: Money and Monetary Policy in China, 1000-1700, by Richard von Glahn















