Demon warrior puppets, sword-wielding Taoist priests, spirit mediums lacerating their bodies with spikes and blades—these are among the most dramatic images in Chinese religion. Usually linked to the propitiation of plague gods and the worship of popular military deities, such ritual practices have an obvious but previously unexamined kinship with the traditional Chinese martial arts.
The long and durable history of martial arts iconography and ritual in Chinese religion suggests something far deeper than mere historical coincidence. Avron Boretz argues that martial arts gestures and movements are so deeply embedded in the ritual repertoire in part because they iconify masculine qualities of violence, aggressivity, and physical prowess, the implicit core of Chinese patriliny and patriarchy. At the same time, for actors and audience alike, martial arts gestures evoke the mythos of the jianghu, a shadowy, often violent realm of vagabonds, outlaws, and masters of martial and magic arts. Through the direct bodily practice of martial arts movement and creative rendering of jianghu narratives, martial ritual practitioners are able to identify and represent themselves, however briefly and incompletely, as men of prowess, a reward otherwise denied those confined to the lower limits of this deeply patriarchal society.
Based on fieldwork in China and Taiwan spanning nearly two decades, Gods, Ghosts, and Gangsters offers a thorough and original account of violent ritual and ritual violence in Chinese religion and society. Close-up, sensitive portrayals and the voices of ritual actors themselves—mostly working-class men, many of them members of sworn brotherhoods and gangs—convincingly link martial ritual practice to the lives and desires of men on the margins of Chinese society. This work is a significant contribution to the study of Chinese ritual and religion, the history and sociology of Chinese underworld, the history and anthropology of the martial arts, and the anthropology of masculinity.
0 有用 Tony Yet 2017-04-26 19:39:38
a very thoughtful ethnographic note on rituals of masculinity in China
0 有用 水逆退散 2025-11-20 23:12:46 中国香港
读了之后觉得总是拿江湖和武术说事有点orientalism,写了批判一通的读书报告,然后老师一句你去过台东吗? you are missing the context here. 但听了解释之后觉得确实有点道理。台东的历史传统和大陆太不一样了,violence element所占据的比例也不一样。也许以后可以再看一遍。至少文和武的解释确实很精彩。但依然不知道martial和religion的关系究... 读了之后觉得总是拿江湖和武术说事有点orientalism,写了批判一通的读书报告,然后老师一句你去过台东吗? you are missing the context here. 但听了解释之后觉得确实有点道理。台东的历史传统和大陆太不一样了,violence element所占据的比例也不一样。也许以后可以再看一遍。至少文和武的解释确实很精彩。但依然不知道martial和religion的关系究竟是什么… (展开)