List of Illustrations
Acknowledgements
Prologue: Six Decades of Studying Chinese Religion
1. Chinese Religion: The Oldest Documented Religious Tradition
2. Five Centuries of the Western Misrepresentation of Chinese
Religion
3. Familism: The Global Context of Chinese Religion
4. The Theology Implicit in the Early Confucian Tradition: The
Fundamental Understanding of the Meaning of Life in Chinese
Culture
5. The Role of Possession Trance in Chinese Culture and Religion: A
Comparative Overview from the Neolithic to the Present
6. State and Religion in China: The District Magistrate as
Priest
7. Freedom of Religion in China: In the Past and Under the Chinese
Communist Party
8. Why Buddhism Succeeded and Christianity Failed in China
9. The Theology of the Chinese Jews: A Synthesis of Judaism and
Neo-Confucianism
Epilogue: Chinese Religion Today in China and the Chinese
Diaspora
Appendix: Chronological Chart
Bibliography
Notes
Index
Jordan Paper, for the first time in religious studies, applies the paradigm of familism to Chinese religion, arguing that it allows for a better understanding of religion in China.
Jordan Paper is Professor Emeritus at York University (Toronto) and a Fellow at the Centre for Studies in Religion and Society at the University of Victoria (BC), Canada. He is author of a dozen books covering Chinese Religion, Native American religions, polytheism, mysticism, female spirituality, and Chinese Judaism.
The volume’s value lies in intriguing questions, informative
illustrations, and relevant glimpses at local practices.
*Religious Studies Review*
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