The Interweaving of Rituals: Funerals in the Cultural Exchange between China and Europe

The Interweaving of Rituals: Funerals in the Cultural Exchange between China and Europe

by Nicolas Standaert
The Interweaving of Rituals: Funerals in the Cultural Exchange between China and Europe

The Interweaving of Rituals: Funerals in the Cultural Exchange between China and Europe

by Nicolas Standaert

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Overview

The death of the Italian Jesuit Matteo Ricci in China in 1610 was the occasion for demonstrations of European rituals appropriate for a Catholic priest and also of Chinese rituals appropriate to the country hosting the Jesuit community. Rather than burying Ricci immediately in a plain coffin near the church, according to their European practice, the Jesuits followed Chinese custom and kept Ricci's body for nearly a year in an air-tight Chinese-style coffin and asked the emperor for burial ground outside the city walls. Moreover, at Ricci's funeral itself, on their own initiative the Chinese performed their funerary rituals, thus starting a long and complex cultural dialogue in which they took the lead during the next century.

The Interweaving of Rituals explores the role of ritual - specifically rites related to death and funerals - in cross-cultural exchange, demonstrating a gradual interweaving of Chinese and European ritual practices at all levels of interaction in seventeenth-century China. This includes the interplay of traditional and new rituals by a Christian community of commoners, the grafting of Christian funerals onto established Chinese practices, and the sponsorship of funeral processions for Jesuit officials by the emperor. Through careful observation of the details of funerary practice, Nicolas Standaert illustrates the mechanics of two-way cultural interaction. His thoughtful analysis of the ritual exchange between two very different cultural traditions is especially relevant in today's world of global ethnic and religious tension. His insights will be of interest to a broad range of scholars, from historians to anthropologists to theologians.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780295988108
Publisher: University of Washington Press
Publication date: 03/25/2008
Series: China Program Books Series
Pages: 336
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 1.04(d)
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Nicolas Standaert is professor of Sinology at Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, Belgium. He is the author of Yang Tingyun, Confucian and Christian in Late Ming China: His Life and Thought and editor of Handbook of Christianity in China: Volume 1, 635-1800.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments

Introduction

1. Chinese and European Funerals

2. Missionaries' Knowledge of Chinese Funerals

3. The Gradual Embedding of Christian Funeral Rituals in China

4. Funerals as Public Manifestation

5. Funerals as Community Practice

6. Christian versus Superstitious Rituals

7. Imperial Sponsorship of Jesuit Funerals

8. Conclusion: The Metaphor of Textile Weaving

Appendix

Notes

Chinese Glossary

Abbreviations

Bibliography

Index

What People are Saying About This

Timothy Brook

The Interweaving of Rituals is one of the most surprising books on Chinese history that I have ever read. The author's command of sources in Chinese, Latin, and vernacular European languages is exemplary. It is a book of immense erudition, worn lightly.

Henrietta Harrison

This book is an outstanding work of original scholarship. Standaert uses a huge range of published and unpublished materials in many European languages as well as in Chinese. Several of the texts he discusses, such as the set of Chinese Christian funeral instructions from Guangdong Province, will be new to nearly all China scholars and are likely to be of great interest in themselves for the study of Chinese rituals and practices. The interpretation is original and the scholarship is so strong that one would be hard put to disagree with the conclusions.

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