Introduction; 1. Foundations of religion in society in Manchuria; 2. From the blood of the martyrs; 3. The mind of empire; 4. Piety in print; 5. The laws of men; 6. A charitable view; 7. Manchukuo's filial sons; 8. May God bless Manchukuo; Conclusion; Appendices; Bibliography.
This book reveals how religion shaped ideas and propelled the lightning-quick development of Manchuria at the start of the twentieth century.
Thomas David DuBois is a leading scholar of religion in East Asian history, and is the author of Religion and the Making of Modern East Asia (Cambridge, 2011) and Sacred Village: Social Change and Religious Life in Rural North China (2005). His work has been published in Arabic, Chinese and Russian translation.
'Few scholars in the world can match DuBois' knowledge of the
modern religious and political histories of China and Japan. In
this book he applies that knowledge to Manchuria, a state whose
history has already revolutionized global historical thinking about
relations between tradition and modernity, the national and the
cosmopolitan. An impressive new contribution to scholarship on the
politics of religion.' Kiri Paramore, Leiden University, author of
Japanese Confucianism: A Cultural History
'In this exhilarating and original study of early twentieth-century
Manchuria in global context, Thomas DuBois paints a lively picture
of the politics and history of spiritual governance in a time and
place that seems far removed from our own - but isn't as far as you
might think. From an original and provocative account of the Boxer
Uprising, to the politics of knowledge generation in Japanese and
East Asian social science circles, to the designation of certain
groups as 'religious bandits' in the Japanese owned Shengjing
Times, to the politics of religious freedom and Protestant and
Catholic mission in Japanese colonial Manchukuo, to the emergence
of philanthropy as a civic sphere distinct from religion by groups
such as the Daoyuan and the World Red Swastika Society, this book
never quits. A fascinating, fun and indispensable read for anyone
interested in the shifting and entangled fields of spirituality,
sovereignty, empire, nationalism, and law.' Elizabeth Shakman Hurd,
Northwestern University
Ask a Question About this Product More... |