Shamanic and Mythic Cultures of Ethnic Peoples in Northern China II

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A01=Fu Yuguang
Aisin Gioro
Ancestral Deity
Author_Fu Yuguang
Birch Bark
Bone Divination
Category=JHM
Category=JHMC
Changbai Mountain
Chief Shaman
Clan Shamans
Divine Judgement
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eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
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Forklore
Han Chinese's cultures
Heilong River
Holy Mountain
Hong Taiji
Jilin Province
Jurchen Tribes
Manchu Studies
Northern China's shamanic spirituality
Northern Ethnic Groups
Northern Myths
Northern Peoples
Northern shamanic divination
Roe Deer
Shamanic Costumes
Shamanic Culture
Shamanic Divination
Shamanic rituals
Shamanism
Sister Goddesses
Spirit idols
Tibetan Buddhism
Wu Clan
Yarrow Stalks
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367654139
  • Weight: 500g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 30 Dec 2020
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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On the basis of first-hand materials gathered through decades of field research and fleshed out with the author’s insightful religious, cultural, and historical observations extending back to the Qing dynasty, ancient archaeological discoveries, and the legacy of Siberian peoples, this two-volume ethnological study investigates shamanic rituals, myths, and lore in northern China and explores the common ideology underlying the origins of the region’s cultures.

This second volume focuses on northern shamanic divination, spirit idols, and folklore covering the myths of the Manchu-Tungus, Manchu creation shrine tales, and individual tribal myths. This mythic heritage helps identify shared patterns of thought among the ethnic peoples of northern China; points to cultural integration with Buddhist, Daoist, and Han Chinese cultures; and shows their understand of the natural world, the creation of humankind, social life, and history and their interactions with their surroundings. In this regard, shamanic spirituality in northern China is characterized by functionality and practicality in daily life situations, in contrast to the received wisdom that defines shamanic praxis as a pure supernatural spirit journey.

The book will be of great value to scholars of religion and to both anthropologists and ethnologists in the fields of shamanism studies, Northeast Asian folklore, and Manchu studies.

Fu Yuguang, a native Manchu scholar of shamanic and Manchu studies from the Jilin Institute for Ethnology, has been committed to ethnological and anthropological research on the myths, rituals, and cultures of Altaic peoples in northern China for over fifty years and published many influential works.

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