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Buddhism and the State: A New Relationship: Increasing Numbers of Believers Bring Great Changes to the Monastic Economy in China |
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Author |
Ji, Zhe (著)
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Liddell, Philip (譯)
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Source |
China Perspectives
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Volume | n.55 |
Date | 2004.09-10 |
Pages | 2 - 10 |
Publisher | French Centre for Research on Contemporary China |
Publisher Url |
http://www.cefc.com.hk
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Content type | 期刊論文=Journal Article |
Language | 英文=English |
Note | Translated from the French original by Philip Liddell. |
Abstract | In the early 1980s, Buddhism in China entered a period of revival and prosperity, yet it retained a sense of public disgrace inherited from nearly three decades of persecution. In order to survive and to conform to the value system imposed by the government, the monks were forced to engage in “productive labour”. However, Buddhism’s growing influence among lay people, and the increasing quantity of exchanges between monasteries and believers promoted a steady growth in the value of Buddhism’s cultural and religious capital. From the 1990s onwards, local authorities sought to co-operate with Buddhism, hoping to profit by its cultural capital through attracting investors and promoting tourism. The state did not cease to control and to oppress the Buddhists although, guided by economic interests, it contributed in some cases to promoting and reconstructing Buddhism: the monasteries thus found new legitimacy and new space for development.
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Table of contents | "Combining Chan with agricultural work": an economic strategy in confor7mity with political ideology 3 "Cultivate the good earth" and "make merit": towards a monastic economy founded on cultural capital 6 "Culture builds the state and the economy performs": a new relationship between the state and Buddhism 8 |
ISSN | 20703449 (P); 19964617 (E) |
Hits | 124 |
Created date | 2023.11.13 |
Modified date | 2023.11.15 |
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