Making Transcendents: Ascetics and Social Memory in Early Medieval China

Author:   Robert Ford Campany
Publisher:   University of Hawai'i Press
ISBN:  

9780824833336


Pages:   320
Publication Date:   28 February 2009
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Awaiting stock   Availability explained


Our Price $126.72 Quantity:  
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Making Transcendents: Ascetics and Social Memory in Early Medieval China


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Author:   Robert Ford Campany
Publisher:   University of Hawai'i Press
Imprint:   University of Hawai'i Press
Dimensions:   Width: 15.20cm , Height: 2.80cm , Length: 22.90cm
Weight:   0.654kg
ISBN:  

9780824833336


ISBN 10:   0824833333
Pages:   320
Publication Date:   28 February 2009
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Out of Print
Availability:   Awaiting stock   Availability explained

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Reviews

This impressive monograph has much to offer empirically and methodologically, both to sinology and to the wider community of historians interested in hagiography as a source of insight into the social construction of saintly/holy persons in any cultural and historical context. -China Review International (18:2, 2011) A groundbreaking achievement in the study of Chinese religion that rewards the attention not only of sinologists, but also students of hagiography, history, narrative theory, ascetics or holy men or women, and performance theory. -Frontiers of History in China (6:2, June 2011)


This impressive monograph has much to offer empirically and methodologically, both to sinology and to the wider community of historians interested in hagiography as a source of insight into the social construction of saintly/holy persons in any cultural and historical context. -China Review International; A groundbreaking achievement in the study of Chinese religion that rewards the attention not only of sinologists, but also students of hagiography, history, narrative theory, ascetics or holy men or women, and performance theory. -Frontiers of History in China; Campany summarizes scholarship on the sociology of secrecy, recent work on how identity is shaped through culture, and he supplies the best discussion I have read on the problems and explanatory potential of hagiography. The epilogue which addresses the fundamental problems of how we can assess the sincerity and motivations of adepts and the extent to which we can determine from stories about transcendents what really happened, is especially clear and eloquent. In short, this is a book as surprising and rich in detail as the stories that inspired it. -Journal of Chinese Studies; If one day we arrive at a more profound understanding of the hidden agendas behind so much of Chinese writing, hagiographical as well as historical, Making Transcendents will undoubtedly have played a significant role in that process. -Journal of Asian Studies; Invaluable for anyone who wishes to understand the phenomenon of sanctity in general and the Chinese cult of xian in particular. -Religious Studies Review; This pioneering study overturns conventional wisdom about ancient Chinese religious traditions by vividly portraying the social processes by which adepts could achieve recognition and legitimacy as transcendents (immortals). Campany convincingly demonstrates that some forms of self-cultivation and asceticism were culturally scripted performances that could have a profound impact on the audiences who observed or read about them, and that both adepts and the individuals they encountered were involved in constructing narratives about transcendence. Making Transcendents succeeds in bringing these seemingly ephemeral beings down from the summits and the clouds by locating them where they have always belonged: in the hearts of their worshippers and acquaintances. This eloquently written book should prove an invaluable resource for both teaching and research. -Paul R. Katz, Academia Sinica; Robert Campany, probably the most exciting thinker working in Chinese religions today, does not disappoint with this volume. One of the most original contributions of this path-breaking book is his re-reading of hagiographic accounts not merely as records of belief, accounts of divine individuals revealing something about the nature of the sacred, but also as records of real-world individuals, religious professionals, interacting with a community of believers, skeptics, officials, and hangers-on. Rigorous in its methodology, informed by the most current scholarship, and broadly comparative in its approach, Making Transcendents will significantly change the treatment of early Chinese religious history. It should have wide appeal among scholars of early China and to students of mysticism the world over. -Terry Kleeman, University of Colorado, Boulder; Robert Campany does a beautiful job of analyzing the quest for transcendence in early medieval China, reconstructing the religious and social worlds within which this quest flourished and within which the seekers of transcendence lived, established their reputations, and were remembered thereafter. In order to tease out the complexities of how to understand these seekers and the texts in which they were commemorated, Campany draws upon the rich resources of theory in religious studies and thereby provides a powerful approach that will be inspiring to scholars of any religious tradition. This is a book that will help to bring Chinese materials into the larger conversation of religious studies in general, and it will undoubtedly become a classic. -Michael Puett, Harvard University;


Author Information

Robert Ford Campany is professor of religion and East Asian languages and cultures at the University of Southern California.

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