Thank you Mercedes for a wonderful introduction and I should mention that the
Jian-Jing Guo grant I received together with Stefania Travagnin who is at
Groningen University so we're co-directing the project so that I want her to be
acknowledged too. I want to thank the EKGF here and Professor Lackner for
inviting me here and all of the colleagues that I've had the pleasure to
have lunch and dinners with and conversations. It's been a really
wonderful, wonderful experience for me and I'm going to be sad to leave in June
but I'll make the most of it until then. So today I want to talk about spirit
writing in Sichuan or the anxiety for the future and but the reason why I
changed the topic a little bit is that I realized that as most of us realize the
audience is heterogeneous. Some of you know a lot about spirit writing,
some of you know nothing about spirit writing and so it's I hope that I'll
give you an introduction and then possibly going in depth into my topic of
research which is spirit writing communities in Sichuan. So I want to
start by saying what is spirit writing. Spirit writing is a religious technique
that connects a person or more often a community gathered around an
altar to a specific divinity in an effort to respond to personal requests,
to seek positive outcomes and for general moral guidance. The divinity then
responds by dictating scriptures through the body of a medium and through an
implement that I will show you in a second. The practice is part of a larger
context of divine revelations which have gone, which have a long history in
Chinese religions especially Taoism. This specific practice has an attestive
beginning in the 11th or 12th century but it flourished later and developed
in very specific ways in the late imperial and Republican period. Seeking a
personal connection with the divine word in the form of written communication is
a long-standing Chinese religious practice and the work of Taoist
scholars on the formation of early Taoist scriptures through divine
revelations are an excellent example of that. But this mode of communication
is also one that China shares with many other religions and cultures and a
comparison, a culture, cross-cultural comparison is something that is
definitely needed in the future. However while Western insensations of the
practice have received much attention and research, religious text revelation
in China has received not as much attention and it should have. More
specifically while the early formation of Taoist canons through revelatory
practices has been studied in detail, this practice ubiquitous in the late
Qing and the Republican period and present in Taiwan and Hong Kong until
today needs more work especially from a historical point of view. So more
specifically I want to say really quickly how this works. A medium visited
by the divinity holds a bifurcated tree branch on a top of a sand tray. The
branch is moved by the divinity and forms words on the tray. The words are
then read out loud by an attendant and written down by at least one other
attendant. Sometimes specific questions are posed, sometimes the divinity
responds to contemporary events inside or outside the community and the short
responses or longer scriptures are then distributed, printed and distributed to
the individuals or the whole community. This is still what happens today in
Taiwan and in Hong Kong and we have very long scriptures from the Qing dynasty
which are which were transmitted in this way and which are the topic of my work.
Now what is period writing? Originally I wanted to just give you a really
brief sense of the origin. Some scholars say that the origins are in the
cult of Zigu, the goddess of the latrines. Zigu was apparently a concubine who was
Presenters
Prof. Dr. Elena Valussi
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00:44:21 Min
Aufnahmedatum
2018-01-16
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2018-03-13 09:14:20
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