Hostname: page-component-84b7d79bbc-rnpqb Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-07-25T07:54:20.091Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

1898: the Beginning of the End for Chinese Religion?1

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 April 2017

Get access

Extract

On July 10, 1898, the reformist leader Kang Youwei 康有為 (1858–1927) memorialized the throne proposing that all academies and temples in China, with the exception of those included in registers of state sacrifices (sidian 祀典), be turned into schools. The Guangxu emperor was so pleased with the proposal that he promulgated an edict (shangyu 上諭) the same day taking over Kang’s phrasing. On three occasions in the following weeks, the editorial in the famous Shanghai daily Shenbao 申報 discussed the edict not as a piece of legislation aiming at facilitating the creation ex nihilo of a nationwide network of public schools, but as the declaration of a religious reform, that is, a change in religious policy that would rid China of temple cults and their specialists, Buddhists, Taoists, and spirit-mediums. This it was, indeed, although both Chinese and Western historiography have so far usually neglected to appreciate the importance of the religious element in the so-called Wuxu reforms (June 11–September 21, 1898) and later modernist policies. This importance, as we will see, can be gauged both in the writings of some of the reformist leaders, and among the populations concerned by the practical consequences.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © 2006 by the Association for Asian Studies, Inc. 2006

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

A Ying 阿英, . 1973. Wanqing xiaoshuo shi 晚清小說史 (A history of late Qing novels). Hong Kong: Zhonghua shuju Xianggang fenju.Google Scholar
Ayers, William. 1971. Chang Chih-tung and Educational Reform in China. Cambridge: Harvard University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bailey, Paul J. 1990. Reform the People: Changing Attitudes towards Popular Education in early twentieth-century China. Vancouver: University of British Columbia Press.Google Scholar
Bastid-Bruguière, Marianne. 1997. “Sacrifices d’Etat et légitimité à la fin des Qing.” (State sacrifices and legitimacy during the late Qing) T’oung-pao 83:162–73.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bastid-Bruguière, Marianne. 1998. “Liang Qichao yu zongjiao wenti 梁啟超與宗教問題.” (Liang Qichao and the question of religion) Tôhô gakuhô 東方學報 70:329–73.Google Scholar
Bastid-Bruguière, Marianne. 2002. “La campagne antireligieuse de 1922.” (The 1922 anti-religious campaign) Extrême-Orient Extrême-Occident 24:7793.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bauberot, Jean. 2004. Laïcité 1905–2005 entre passion et raison (Secularism [“laïcité”], 1905–2005. Between passion and reason). Paris: Seuil.Google Scholar
Butler, Matthew. 2002. “Keeping the Faith in Revolutionary Mexico: Clerical and Lay Resistance to Religious Persecution, East Michoacán, 1926–1929.” The Americas 59(1):932.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chen Xiyuan 陳熙遠, . 2002. “‘Zongjiao’ – yige Zhongguo jindai wenhua shi shang de guanjian ci 宗教 – 一個中國近代文化史上的關鍵詞.” (‘Religion,’ a key term in the history of modern Chinese culture) Xin shixue 新史學 13(4):3766.Google Scholar
Chen Xiyuan 陳熙遠, . 1999. “Confucianism Encounters Religion: The Formation of Religious Discourse and the Confucian Movement in Modern China.” PhD diss., Harvard University.Google Scholar
Chen Xiyuan 陳熙遠, . 2005. Confucian Encounters with Religion: Rejections, Appropriations, and Transformations. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Chow Kai-wing 周啟榮, . 1994. The Rise of Confucian Ritualism in Late Imperial China: Ethics, Classics, and Lineage Discourse. Stanford: Stanford University Press.Google Scholar
Clart, Philip. 2003. “Confucius and the Mediums: Is there a ‘Popular Confucianism’?T’oung-pao 89(1–3):138.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dongfang zazhi 東方雜誌 (Eastern Miscellany). Shanghai, monthly, 1904-Google Scholar
Duara Prasenjit, . 1988. Culture, Power, and the State. Rural North China, 1900–1942. Stanford: Stanford University Press.Google Scholar
Duara Prasenjit, . 1991. “Knowledge and Power in the Discourse of Modernity: The Campaigns against Popular Religion in Early Twentieth-Century China.” Journal of Asian Studies 50:6783.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Duara Prasenjit, . 1995. Rescuing History from the Nation: Questioning Narratives of Modern China. Chicago: Chicago University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Duara Prasenjit, . 2003. Sovereignty and Authenticity. Manchukuo and the East Asian Modern, Lanham, Rowman and Littlefield.Google Scholar
Faure, David. 1999. “The Emperor in the Village: Representing the State in South China.” In State and Court Ritual in China, ed. Mcdermott, Joseph P.Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, p. 267–98.Google Scholar
Feuchtwang, Stephan. 1991. “A Chinese Religion Exists.” In An Old State in New Settings: Studies in the Social Anthropology of China in Memory of Maurice Freedman, ed. Baker, Hugh D.R and Feuchtwang, Stephan.Oxford: JASO, p. 139–61.Google Scholar
Franke, Wolfgang. 1960. The Reform and Abolition of the Traditional Chinese Examination System. Cambridge: Center for East Asian Studies.Google Scholar
Goldfuss, Gabriele. 2001. Vers un bouddhisme du XXe siècle. Yang Wenhui (1837–1911), réformateur laïque et imprimeur (Towards a twentieth-century Buddhism. Yang Wenhui (1837–1911), lay reformer and publisher). Paris: Collège de France, Institut des Hautes Etudes Chinoises.Google Scholar
Goossaert, Vincent. 2001. “La gestion des temples chinois au XIXe siècle: droit coutumier ou laisser-faire?” (The management of Chinese temples during the nineteenth century: customary law or laisser-faire?) Extrême-Orient Extrême-Occident 23:925.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Goossaert, Vincent. 2002a. “Starved of Resources. Clerical Hunger and Enclosures in Nineteenth-Century China.” Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies 62(1):77133.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Goossaert, Vincent. 2002b. “Anatomie d’un discours anticlérical: le Shenbao, 1872–1878.” (The anatomy of an anticlerical discourse: the Shenbao, 1872–1878) Extrême-Orient Extrême-Occident 24:113–31.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Goossaert, Vincent (ed.). 2002c. “Anticléricalisme en Chine.” (Anticlericalism in China) Extrême-Orient Extrême-Occident 24.Google Scholar
Goossaert, Vincent. 2003. “Le destin de la religion chinoise au 20e siècle.” (Chinese religion’s twentieth-century destiny) Social Compass 50(4):429–40.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Guangxu chao donghua lu 光緒朝東華錄 (Official records of the Guangxu reign). Beijing: Zhonghua shuju, 1958.Google Scholar
Hardacre, Helen. 1989. Shintô and the state, 1868–1988. Princeton: Princeton University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hu Shi 胡適, . 1995. Hu Shi zaonian wencun 胡適早年文存 (Prose writings of the young Hu Shi). Taipei: Yuanliu chuban shiye gongsi.Google Scholar
Huangchao jingshi wenbian 皇朝經世文編 (Anthology of statecraft essays of our [Qing] dynasty). He Changling 賀長齡, (1785–1848), comp., 1826. Shanghai: Guangbaisong zhai, 1889.Google Scholar
Huang Zhangjian 黃彰健, . 1974. Kang Youwei wuxu zhen zouyi (fu Kang Youwei wei wuxu zougao) 康有為戊戌真奏議 (附康有為偽戊戌奏稿) (Authentic memorials by Kang Youwei in 1898. Appendix: spurious memorial drafts). Taipei: Zhongyang yanjiuyuan Lishi yuyan yanjiusuo, Shiliao congshu.Google Scholar
Husband, William B. 2000. Godless Communists: Atheism and Society in Soviet Russia, 1917–1932. DeKalb: Northern Illinois University Press.Google Scholar
Janku, Andrea. 2003. Nur leere Reden: Politischer Diskurs und die Shanghaier Presse im China des späten 19. Jahrhunderts (Just empty words: Political discourse and the Shanghai Press in late nineteenth-century China). Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz.Google Scholar
Jiang Zhushan 蔣竹山, . 1995. “Tang Bin jinhui Wutong shen – Qingchu zhengzhi jingying daji tongsu wenhua de gean 湯斌禁毀五通神 –清初政治菁英打擊通俗文化的個案.” (Tang Bin’s destruction of the Wutong (temples). A case of early Qing political elite’s attack on popular culture) Xin shixue 新史學 6(2):67110.Google Scholar
Jochim, Christian. 2003. “Carrying Confucianism into the Modern World.” In Religion in Modern Taiwan. Tradition and Innovation in a Changing Society, ed. Clart, Philip and Jones, Charles B.Honolulu: University of Hawai’i Press, p. 4883.Google Scholar
Kang Youwei quanji 康有為全集 (Complete works of Kang Youwei). Jiang Yihua 姜義華, , Wu Genliang 吳根樑, , ed. Shanghai: Shanghai guji chubanshe, 1990.Google Scholar
Karl, Rebecca E. and Zarrow, Peter, ed. 2002. Rethinking the 1898 Reform Period: Political and Cultural Change in late Qing China. Cambridge: Harvard University Asia Center.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ketelaar, James Edward. 1990. Of Heretics and Martyrs in Meiji Japan: Buddhism and its Persecution. Princeton: Princeton University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kojima Tsuyoshi 小島毅, . 1991. “Seishi to inshi: Fukken no chihôshi ni okeru kijutsu to rinri 正祠と淫祠 : 福建の地方志における記述と論理.” (Proper and improper cults: theory and descriptions in Fujian gazetteers) Tôyô Bunka Kenkyûjo kiyô 東洋文化研究所紀要 114:87213.Google Scholar
Lee Fong-mao 李豐楙, . 2001. “Lisheng yu daoshi: Taiwan minjian shehui zhong liyi shijian de liangge mianxiang 禮生與道士台灣民間社會中禮儀實踐的兩個面向.” (Confucian priests and Taoist priests: two aspects of ritual practice in Taiwanese society) In Shehui minzu yu wenhua zhanyan guoji yantaohui lunwenji 社會民族與文化展演國際研討會論文集 (Proceedings of the international conference on Society, ethnicity, and cultural performance), ed. Wang Ch’iu-kuei 王秋桂, , Chuang Ying-chang 莊英章, and Ch’en Chung-min 陳中民, . Taipei: Hanxue yanjiu zhongxin, p. 331–64.Google Scholar
Li Xiaoti 李孝悌, . 1992. Qingmo de xiaceng shehui qimeng yundong: 1901–1911 清末的下層社會啟蒙運動 (The movement for the education of the lower classes during the late Qing, 1901–1911). Taipei: Zhongyang yanjiuyuan Jindaishi yanjiusuo.Google Scholar
Mair, Victor. 1985. “Language and Ideology in the Written Popularizations of the Sacred Edict.” In Popular Culture in Late Imperial China, ed. Johnson, David, Nathan, Andrew J and Rawski, Evelyn S.Berkeley: University of California Press, p. 325–59.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Makita Tairyô 枚田諦亮, . 1984. “Seimotsu irai ni okeru byôsan kôgaku 清末以來に於ける 廟產興學.” (The movement for building schools with temple property since the late Qing) In Chûgoku bukkyôshi kenkyû 中國佛教史研究 (Studies on Chinese Buddhist history), vol. 2. Tokyo: Taito shuppansha, p. 290318 [originaly published in Chûgoku kinsei bukkyô shi kenkyû 中國今世佛教史研究. Kyoto: Heirakuji shoten, 1957].Google Scholar
Mitani Takashi 三谷考, . 1978. “Nankin seiken to ‘meishin daha undô’ (1928–1929)南京政權と迷信打破運動.” (The anti-superstition campaign of the Nanking regime, 1928–29) Rekishigaku kenkyû 歷史學研究 455(4):114.Google Scholar
Mittler, Barbara. 2004. A newspaper for China?: power, identity, and change in Shanghai’s news media, 1872–1912. Cambridge: Harvard University Asia Center.Google Scholar
Nedostup, Rebecca Allyn. 2001. “Religion, Superstition, and Governing Society in Nationalist China.” PhD diss., Columbia University.Google Scholar
Picard, Michel. 2003. “What’s in a name? Agama Hindu Bali in the making.” In Hinduism in Modern Indonesia. A minority religion between local, national and global interests, ed. Ramstedt, Martin.London and New York: RoutledgeCurzon-IIAS Asian Studies Series, p. 5675.Google Scholar
Prazniak, Roxann. 1999. Of Camel Kings and Other Things. Rural Rebels against Modernity in Late Imperial China. Lanham: Rowman and Littlefield.Google Scholar
Qiushu 訄書 (Urgency), Zhang Taiyan 章太炎, (1868–1936), in Zhang Taiyan quanji 章太炎全集 (Complete works of Zhang Taiyan). Shanghai: Shanghai renmin chubanshe, 1984, vol. 3.Google Scholar
Rhoads, Edward. 1975. China’s Republican Revolution. The Case of Kwangtung, 1895–1913. Cambridge: Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
Rowe, William T. 2001. Saving the World. Chen Hongmou and Elite Consciousness in Eighteenth-Century China. Stanford: Stanford University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Saomi zhou 掃迷帚 (The broom to sweep away superstitions). In Wanqing wenxue congchao 晚清文學叢鈔 (A collection of late Qing literature), “Xiaoshuo yi juan, xiace 小說一卷下冊,” (Novels, first volume) ed. A Ying 阿英, . Beijing: Zhonghua shuju, 1960, p. 390442.Google Scholar
Sawada Mizuho 澤田瑞穗, . 1982. “Seimotsu no shiten mondai 清末の祀典問題.” (The problem of the sacrificial register during the late Qing) In Chûgoku no minkan shinkô 中國の民間信仰 (Chinese popular beliefs). Tokyo: Kôsakusha, p. 534–49.Google Scholar
Schneewind, Sarah. 1999. “Competing Institutions: Community Schools and ‘Improper Shrines’ in Sixteenth Century China.” Late Imperial China 20(1):85106.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Shenbao 申報. Shanghai: Shenbaoguan, daily, 18721949.Google Scholar
Shengshi weiyan 盛世危言 (Daring words in an age of abundance). Zheng Guanying 鄭觀應, (1842–1921). Zhengzhou: Zhongguo guji chubanshe, 1998.Google Scholar
Shi Dongchu 釋東初, . 1974. Zhongguo fojiao jindai shi 中國佛教近代史 (Modern history of Chinese Buddhism). Taipei: Dongchu chubanshe.Google Scholar
Shi Zhouren 施舟人 (Kristofer Schipper), . 2002. “Daojiao zai jindai Zhongguo de bianqian 道教在近代中國的變遷.” (The transformation of Taoism in modern China) In Zhongguo wenhua jiyin ku 中國文化基因庫 (The gene bank of Chinese culture). Beijing: Beijing daxue chubanshe, p. 146–62.Google Scholar
Shishi baoguan wushen quannian huabao 時事報館戊申全年畫報 (Illustrated news of the year 1908 published by the Shishi baoguan). 1909. In Qingmo minchu baokan tuhua jicheng 清末民初報刊圖畫集成 (An Anthology of the Late Qing and Early Republican illustrated press), Guojia tushuguan fenguan 國家圖書館分館, comp. Beijing: Quanguo tushuguan wenxian weisuo fuzhi zhongxin, 2003, vols. 10–17.Google Scholar
Song Shu ji 宋恕集 (Complete Works of Song Shu (1862–1910)). Beijing: Zhonghua shuju, 1993.Google Scholar
Sutton, Donald. 2000. “From Credulity to Scorn: Confucians Confront the Spirit Mediums in Late Imperial China.” Late Imperial China 21(2):139.Google Scholar
Szonyi, Michael. 1997. “The Illusion of Standardizing the gods: the Cult of the Five Emperors in Late Imperial China.” Journal of Asian Studies 56(1):113–35.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Taopi gongdu 陶甓公牘 (Official papers from the brick kiln). Liu Ruji 劉汝驥, , 1911, in Guanzhen shu jicheng 官箴書集成 (Compendium of bureaucratic handbooks). Hefei: Huangshan shushe, 1997, vol. 10.Google Scholar
Thompson, Roger. 1988. “Statecraft and Self-Government: Competing Visions of Community and State in Late Imperial China.” Modern China 14(2):188221.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Vittinghoff, Natascha. 2002. Die Anfänge des Journalismus in China (1860–1911) (The beginnings of journalism in China, 1860–1911). Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz.Google Scholar
Wagner, Rudolf. 2001. “The Early Chinese Newspapers and the Chinese Public Sphere.” European Journal of East Asia History 1:133.Google Scholar
Wang, David Der-wei. 1997. Fin-de-siècle Splendor. Repressed Modernities of Late Qing Fiction, 1849–1911. Stanford: Stanford University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wang, Di. 2003. Street Culture in Chengdu. Public Space, Urban Commoners, and Local Politics, 1870–1930. Stanford: Stanford University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wang Shuhuai 王樹槐, . 1977. “Qingmo Jiangsu difang zizhi fengchao 清末江蘇地方自治風潮.” (The unrests caused by local self-government in late-Qing Jiangsu) Zhongyang yanjiuyuan Jindaishi yanjiusuo jikan 中央研究院近代史研究所集刊 6:313–27.Google Scholar
Welch, Holmes. 1968. The Buddhist Revival in China. Cambridge: Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
Wuxu bianfa 戊戌變法 ([Documents of] the 1898 reforms). Jian Bozan 翦伯贊, et al. , comp. Shanghai: Shenzhou guoguangshe, 1953.Google Scholar
Wuxu bianfa wenxian ziliao xiri 戊戌變法文獻資料系日 (Documents of the 1898 reforms arranged chronologically). Qinghua daxue lishixi 清華大學歷史系, comp. Shanghai: Shanghai shudian chubanshe, 1998.Google Scholar
Xingshi yuan tanci 醒世緣彈詞 (A Drum-song story to awaken the world). Li Boyuan 李伯元, (1867–1906). In Li Boyuan quanji 李伯元全集 (Complete works of Li Boyuan). Nanjing: Jiangsu guji chubanshe, 1997, vol. 3.Google Scholar
Yufo yuan 玉佛緣 (The cause of the Jade Buddha). In Wanqing wenxue congchao 晚清文學叢鈔, “Xiaoshuo yi juan, xiace 小說一卷下冊,” ed. A Ying 阿英, . Beijing: Zhonghua shuju, 1960, p. 390442.Google Scholar
Zhang Jizi jiulu 張季子九錄 (Zhang Jian’s essays, in nine collections). Zhang Jian 張謇, (1853–1926). Shanghai: Zhonghua shuju, 1931.Google Scholar
Zhang Zhidong quanji 張之洞全集 (Complete works of Zhang Zhidong). Zhangjiakou: Hebei renmin chubanshe, 1998.Google Scholar
Zhejiang fengsu gailiang qianshuo 浙江風俗改良淺說 (Straightforward speeches for reforming the customs in Zhejiang). 1910. Hangzhou: Zhejiang guanbao.Google Scholar
Zouding xuetang zhangcheng 奏定學堂章程 (School regulations approved by the Emperor). Zhang Zhidong 張之洞, (1837–1909), Rongqing 榮慶, (jinshi 1886), and Zhang Baixi 張百熙, (1847–1907), January 1904.Google Scholar