this article analyses the destruction of immoral temples (hui yinci) by local officials during the Qing period. It discusses the fluctuating category of yinci; present narratives of destruction and place destruction, and the threat of destruction as a tool to be used in larger projects of religious reforms
This article is a study of the continuities and changes in the state-led institutionalisation of rel...
Anatomy of an anticlerical discourse: the Shenbao, 1872-1878 The Shenbao, the chief daily publicati...
This article looks at the Tibetan Buddhism revitalization in China in particular, in Kham Tibet, and...
this article analyses the destruction of immoral temples (hui yinci) by local officials during the Q...
International audienceThis article takes as its starting point an examination of the statute of the ...
A state of the field of second- and early third-century Chinese popular religiosity, this article di...
The People\u27s Republic of China has a complicated relationship with religion, which became even te...
This article investigates the role of overseas Chinese in attempts to reclaim temple property in Fuj...
This article explores regional Buddhist monasteries in Tang Dynasty (618–907 CE) China, including th...
In China, as in India, ritual roles are distributed across the entire social field, rather than bein...
International audienceLate imperial officials, from the highest-ranking ministers in Peking down to ...
Based on the monastic code entitled Chixiu Baizhang qinggui (Imperial Edition of Baizhang’s Rule of ...
This article takes the example of a disappeared altar in a Himalayan valley as revelatory of contrad...
This article focuses on three conceptual lenses through which a better understanding of the politics...
Following several successful military expeditions against the Mongols in the seventeenth and eightee...
This article is a study of the continuities and changes in the state-led institutionalisation of rel...
Anatomy of an anticlerical discourse: the Shenbao, 1872-1878 The Shenbao, the chief daily publicati...
This article looks at the Tibetan Buddhism revitalization in China in particular, in Kham Tibet, and...
this article analyses the destruction of immoral temples (hui yinci) by local officials during the Q...
International audienceThis article takes as its starting point an examination of the statute of the ...
A state of the field of second- and early third-century Chinese popular religiosity, this article di...
The People\u27s Republic of China has a complicated relationship with religion, which became even te...
This article investigates the role of overseas Chinese in attempts to reclaim temple property in Fuj...
This article explores regional Buddhist monasteries in Tang Dynasty (618–907 CE) China, including th...
In China, as in India, ritual roles are distributed across the entire social field, rather than bein...
International audienceLate imperial officials, from the highest-ranking ministers in Peking down to ...
Based on the monastic code entitled Chixiu Baizhang qinggui (Imperial Edition of Baizhang’s Rule of ...
This article takes the example of a disappeared altar in a Himalayan valley as revelatory of contrad...
This article focuses on three conceptual lenses through which a better understanding of the politics...
Following several successful military expeditions against the Mongols in the seventeenth and eightee...
This article is a study of the continuities and changes in the state-led institutionalisation of rel...
Anatomy of an anticlerical discourse: the Shenbao, 1872-1878 The Shenbao, the chief daily publicati...
This article looks at the Tibetan Buddhism revitalization in China in particular, in Kham Tibet, and...