Governing the souls of Chinese modernity
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Kipnis, Andrew
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University of Cambridge
Abstract
Philippe Descola argues that human societies can be categorized by the ways in which they utilize broad assumptions about interiority and physicality, where interiority refers to something similar to what Edward Tylor and James Frazer meant by soul. In Descola's scheme, traditional Chinese culture, which gives play to infinite variability in both interiority and physicality, is strongly 'analogist.' In contrast, Descola defines modern, Western societies as 'naturalist.' We moderns see nature or physicality as universally fixed, but culture or interiority as variable. Contemporary China is rapidly modernizing and scientizing. In Descola's terms, its culture should be transitioning from an analogist one to a naturalist one. Through an examination of practices of memorialization and funerary ritual in urban China as well as Chinese Communist Party attempts to steer the evolution of these practices in reaction to 'modernity,' this essay attempts to tease out what is modern about the conceptions of soul implicit in contemporary Chinese dealings with death.
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HAU: Journal of Ethnographic Theory
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Open Access
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Creative Commons Attribution License