Chinese Religious Life

Front Cover
David A. Palmer, Glenn Shive, Philip L. Wickeri
Oxford University Press, Sep 13, 2011 - Religion - 296 pages
Written by a team of internationally renowned scholars, this volume provides an in-depth introduction to religion in contemporary China. Instead of adopting the traditional focus on pre-modern religious history and doctrinal traditions, Chinese Religious Life examines the social dimensions of religious life, with essays devoted to religion in urban, rural, and ethnic minority settings; to the religious dimensions of body, gender, environment, and civil society; and to the historical, sociological, economic, and political aspects of religion in contemporary Chinese society.
 

Contents

Contributors
The Social Organization of Religious Communities in
Spirituality in a Modern Chinese Metropolis
Communal Worship and Festivals in Chinese Villages
The Religious Life of Ethnic Minority Communities
Modalities of Doing Religion
Health Nation and Transcendence
Gender and Sexuality
Chinese Cosmology and the Environment
Religious Philanthropy and Chinese Civil Society
Religion in Chinese Social and Political History
Contemporary Issues in StateReligion Relations
Market Economy and the Revival of Religions
The Globalization of Chinese Religions and Traditions
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About the author (2011)

David A. Palmer is an assistant professor in the department of Sociology and fellow of the Centre for Anthropological Research at the University of Hong Kong. His most recent book (co-authored with V. Goossaert) is The Religious Question in Modern China (2011). Glenn Shive is the executive director of the Hong Kong America Center, a consortium of Hong Kong universities promoting academic exchange between the United States and Hong Kong and between the United States and China via universities in Hong Kong. His B.A. in religion and PhD in Chinese history are from Temple University in Philadelphia. Philip L. Wickeri is Advisor to Hong Kong's Anglican Archbishop on Theological and Historical Studies and Adjunct Professor of Interdisciplinary Studies at the Graduate Theological Union, Berkeley, California. His most recent book is Reconstructing Christianity in China: K. H. Ting and the Chinese Church (2007).

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