Buddhism in Chinese Society: An Economic History from the Fifth to the Tenth Centuries, by Jacques Gernet. Translated By Franciscus Verellen
Reviewed by Daniel L. Overmyer
Pacific Affairs Vol.68 No.4 Winter 1995 pp.596-597
COPYRIGHT 1995 University of British Columbia (Canada) ; New York: Columbia University Press
THIS BOOK is based on a wide variety of Chinese primary texts, with many translated passages, most from literati or government sources outside Buddhism. Since the author stays close to the critical perspectives of these sources there is useful information here not only about Buddhism, but also about attitudes toward it. Gernet allows that "Buddhism in medieval China was a religious movement. That was its essential characteristic," (p. xv) but as its title indicates, the primary focus of this book is the economic activities of Buddhist monasteries, monks and nuns. There is interesting information here about such topics as monastic ownership of land, serfs, mills, oil presses and pawnshops, as well as on the roles of monasteries as inns and hospitals. There is also good discussion of the wills of monks and nuns and the activities of monasteries in colonizing new land. The author distinguishes three different types of monasteries, those supported by the state, eminent families, and "common monks" (p. 4), and reminds us that "Buddhism in China was not the essentially monastic religion represented by the Vinaya" (p. 96). There is repeated emphasis on the contrast within Buddhism between charity and profit, religious merit and commerce. Another strong point of this study is its detailed discussion of Indian Buddhist teaching concerning economic activities of the sangha as the theoretical background of the Chinese situation. All this is helpful. Nonetheless, there are problems here, the chief of which is that though this book was first published in French in 1956 it was not fundamentally revised and updated for this translation. The original bibliography of secondary sources lists nothing published after 1955; the "additional bibliography" prepared by the translator does include later materials, but few of them are referred to in the book. When it was first published forty years ago, this was an important, path-breaking work, but its republication now is as significant for the history of Western studies of China as for our knowledge of China itself. Specialists have used this book for years, but nonspecialists may not know of more recent interpretations. It is good to be reminded of the economic motivations and activities of some monks and nuns and of the high costs of large monasteries in labor, precious metals and deforestation, but the author goes too far toward economic reductionism in such statements as that in the period in question, "Religious activity appears as a luxury...an entirely gratuitous activity. The monks themselves were a luxury" (p. 196). It is in such an approach that the dated nature of this book is most evident, as is true as well with its discussion of popular devotional activities in such undiluted Durkheimian terms as "the frenzy of the faithful", "collective delirium", "abnormal behavior" and behaving in "an irrational manner" (pp. 237-39). In the midst of a discussion of T'ang Buddhism, the author jumps back seven hundred years to Tse Jung (d. 195) to illustrate "the demagogic nature...of the great religious assemblies..." (pp. 295-96). Throughout this discussion, "the literati" are discussed as a unified group represented by a few skeptical intellectuals with little recognition of the great variety of views that in fact existed. At the end the author accepts completely the old view that after the T'ang Buddhism declined and decayed (pp. 308-310), a view that ignores the vitality of Sung Buddhism that had already been discussed by Suzuki Chusei in 1941, and has been reemphasized in recent decades. The value of this book is its translations of primary sources and its salutary reminder of the importance of economic motivations and activities in the history of Chinese Buddhism. But these motivations are insufficient to explain the vitality and continuity of this tradition down through the centuries, for which religious faith and ideas were also important. For a more balanced treatment of this topic, one should consult Kenneth K. S. Ch'en, The Chinese Transformation of Buddhism (Princeton, 1973), and the several articles by Denis C. Twitchett listed in the "additional bibliography."