发表于2024-11-05
The Souls of China pdf epub mobi txt 电子书 下载
Ian Johnson is a regular contributor to The New York Review of Books and The New York Times; his work has also appeared in The New Yorker and National Geographic. During more than twenty years of working in China he has won the Pulitzer Prize for International Reporting and the Shorenstein lifetime achievement award for covering Asia. An advising editor for the Journal of Asian Studies, he also teaches university courses on religion and society at the Beijing Center for Chinese Studies. He is the author of two other books that also focus on the intersection of politics and religion: Wild Grass: Three Stories of Change in China, and A Mosque in Munich: Nazis, the CIA, and the Rise of the Muslim Brotherhood in the West. He lives in Beijing.
China is in the midst of one of the world’s great spiritual awakenings: some 300 million Chinese currently practice a faith, while tens of millions more follow personal gurus, populist masters and New Age sages. This astonishing revival began in 1982 when the Communist Party pledged to allow what it thought would be a small-scale practice of religion under government supervision. But the faithful have expanded far beyond the Party’s expectations: Today, China’s cities and villages are filled with new temples, churches, and mosques as well as cults, sects and politicians trying to harness religion for their own ends. Fueling this resurgence is a popular desire to rediscover a moral compass in a society driven by naked capitalism.
For six years, Pulitzer Prize–winning writer Ian Johnson lived for extended periods with three religious communities: the underground Early Rain Protestant congregation in Chengdu, the Ni family’s Buddhist pilgrimage association in Beijing, and yinyang Daoist priests in rural Shanxi. Johnson distills these experiences into a cycle of festivals, births, deaths, detentions, and struggle that reveals the hearts and minds of the Chinese people—a great awakening of faith that is shaping the soul of the world’s newest superpower.
断了的传统能接续吗?在经济发展以后,精神生活的空虚需要填补,随之而来的传统文(zong )化(jiao )的复苏,外来精(zong )神(jiao)寄托的迅速发展,而这些发展中官方限制外来的发展,扶持本土儒释道的发展。虽然我觉得作者有点观点有待商榷,但是能有本描绘当下中国人精神世界的书籍也是不错的。
评分##见证历史,记录历史,等待某日的反思与审判。
评分##生动而深入的故事描写,加之广博的历史知识的支撑,呈现古今联系对照的参照感与历史纵深感。一个有趣的细节观察,出于对「宗教」一词的敏感语境,中国传统的民间宗教会以「民间文化」「传统文化」「民俗文化」的面目出现大众和传媒视野,宣传时会自动剔除宗教色彩。不止如此,其管理体制也与一般五大教的管理不一样,归于文化部门管理而不是宗教部门。
评分##见证历史,记录历史,等待某日的反思与审判。
评分##不说立场的问题,民俗志方面的内容很有趣,但是作者对招摇撞骗的神棍是过于同情了。
评分##之前条目又被删了,补标。作者对国内的宗教状况明显过于乐观。
评分##虽然作者想从几个典型老百姓家庭的角度来阐述全文的主题,但是更多内容还是适合英文世界的读者。中文读者看到很多内容并没有觉得惊奇。只是看到文末结尾处致谢人名单里一位前同事的名字,她一直混迹海外驻华记者圈,想来也是不足为奇。
The Souls of China pdf epub mobi txt 电子书 下载