Believing in Ghosts and Spirits

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A01=Hu Baozhu
Ancestral Temple
ancestral worship
Ancient China
ancient Chinese spiritual taxonomy
Author_Hu Baozhu
Bamboo Slips
Bronze Inscriptions
Category=GTM
Category=NHC
Category=QDH
Category=QRS
Category=VXQ
Chinese characters
Chinese literature
Chinese religious beliefs
Chinese Religious Culture
Confucian teachings
cosmological thinking
Duan Yucai
early Chinese philosophy
eq_bestseller
eq_history
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_mind-body-spirit
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
excavated manuscripts
folk Daoists
Ghostly State
ghosts and spirits
Gui
Gui Zhi
Heavenly Stem
Jiaguwen
Jinwen
Liji
Lunyu
Mohist philosophy
Mozi
Myriad Things
oracle bone inscriptions
Oracle Bone Script
Part Si
Phonetic Loan Character
Pu Songling
religious beliefs
Rishu manuscript
ritual cosmology
ritual practices
Sage Kings
Sexagenary Cycle
Shang Dynasty
Shanhai Jing
social order
sociopolitical implication
sociopolitical symbolism
Spiritual Beings
Spiritual Entities
Supreme Lord
Term Gui
Terrestrial Branch
Tv Drama Series
Zhuangzi
Zuozhuan

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367626341
  • Weight: 750g
  • Dimensions: 174 x 246mm
  • Publication Date: 22 Sep 2020
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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The present book by Hu Baozhu explores the subject of ghosts and spirits and attempts to map the religious landscape of ancient China. The main focus of attention is the character gui 鬼, an essential key to the understanding of spiritual beings. The author analyses the character gui in various materials – lexicons and dictionaries, excavated manuscripts and inscriptions, and received classical texts. Gui is examined from the perspective of its linguistic root, literary interpretation, ritual practices, sociopolitical implication, and cosmological thinking. In the gradual process of coming to know the otherworld in terms of ghosts and spirits, Chinese people in ancient times attempted to identify and classify these spiritual entities. In their philosophical thinking, they connected the subject of gui with the movement of the universe. Thus the belief in ghosts and spirits in ancient China appeared to be a moral standard for all, not only providing a room for individual religiosity but also implementing the purpose of family-oriented social order, the legitimization of political operations, and the understanding of the way of Heaven and Earth.

Anthony Hu (Hu Baozhu 胡寳柱) received his M.Div. in 2009 and M.A. in Theology in 2010, both at the Catholic Theological Union in Chicago. He took up his studies in Sinology at the Ludwig Maximilians University of Munich in the fall of 2011 and passed his Ph.D. exam in February 2018. Since May 2018, he works in the editorial office of the Monumenta Serica Institute.

His main research areas include popular religions and culture in China, demonology, communications and cultural exchanges between the West and East, and Christian missions in the period of Ming-Qing.

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