Soulstealers: The Chinese Sorcery Scare of 1768Harvard University Press, 2009年6月30日 - 320 頁 Midway through the reign of the Ch'ien-lung emperor, Hungli, mass hysteria broke out among the common people. It was feared that sorcerers were roaming the land, clipping off the ends of men's queues (the braids worn by royal decree) and chanting magical incantations over them in order to steal the souls of their owners. In a fascinating chronicle of this epidemic of fear and the official prosecution of soulstealers that ensued, Philip Kuhn opens a window on the world of eighteenth-century China. |
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第 1 頁
... hair or clothing , the sorcerer would cause him to sicken and die . He then would use the stolen soul - force for his own purposes . What are we to make of this hysteria that affected the society of twelve great provinces and was felt ...
... hair or clothing , the sorcerer would cause him to sicken and die . He then would use the stolen soul - force for his own purposes . What are we to make of this hysteria that affected the society of twelve great provinces and was felt ...
第 12 頁
... hair clipped from the end of a man's queue and so extract the soul of its former wearer . Lurking in the background , unmentioned by anyone connected with the monks ' case , was the political meaning of hair : the queue , worn behind a ...
... hair clipped from the end of a man's queue and so extract the soul of its former wearer . Lurking in the background , unmentioned by anyone connected with the monks ' case , was the political meaning of hair : the queue , worn behind a ...
第 15 頁
... hair in the days before he had taken vows and shaved his head . Afterward , he had no use for it but kept it with his gear . For the braided hair , he offered no explanation . An unsatisfactory confession , this , from a prisoner whose ...
... hair in the days before he had taken vows and shaved his head . Afterward , he had no use for it but kept it with his gear . For the braided hair , he offered no explanation . An unsatisfactory confession , this , from a prisoner whose ...
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內容
1 | |
2 The Prosperous Age | 30 |
3 Threats Seen and Unseen | 49 |
4 The Crime Defined | 73 |
5 The Roots of Sorcery Fear | 94 |
6 The Campaign in the Provinces | 119 |
7 On the Trail of the MasterSorcerers | 149 |
8 The End of the Trail | 163 |
9 Political Crime and Bureaucratic Monarchy | 187 |
10 Theme and Variations | 223 |
Notes | 235 |
Bibliography | 269 |
Glossary | 279 |
Index | 289 |
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常見字詞
Anhwei arrested Asha beggar Chin begging Board of Civil Buddhist century Ch'en Ch'eng-te Ch'ing Code Chang Ssu-ju Chekiang Chihli China Chinese Civil Office clergy clipping queues common confessions constable court letter CPTC criminals culprits culture death documents Dorgon eighteenth-century elite emperor evaluation evidence evil fear Fuheng G'aojin Governor-general Grand Canal Grand Council grand councillors hair Hangchow Hsiao-shan Hungli impeach inquisitors interrogation Jangboo KCTC Kiangnan Kiangsu late imperial later LFTC/FLCT CL lower Yangtze magic magistrate Manchu mason Wu master-sorcerer matter Ming Ming-yuan monarch monks named Peking popular prefectural prisoner prosecution provincial judge provincial officials Punishments queue-clipping ritual routine rumors sedition Shantung shaved Shen slow slicing social society Soochow sorcery soul soulstealing soulstealing crisis statute story Su-chou subordinates summer capital suspects SYT CL Taoist TCSCSH Te-ch'ing temple Ten Abominations Throne tonsure torture Ts'ai vermilion victims view this image village Wang yamen Yungde