Men Built Religion, Women Made it Superstitious: Gender and Superstition in Republican China

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Abstract

Religion in twentieth-century China was reorganized according to new, modern, and scientific paradigms; in this novel definition, which excluded many communal experiences deemed superstitious, religion came to be identified more with personal practice and individual beliefs, understood as self-strengthening and self-improvement, and was to be one of the responses against Western Imperialism and Japanese occupation. Women had always been seen as closely involved with religious practices, but at this time they were identified as intrinsically and powerfully superstitious, and their religiosity was used as a necessary site of symbolic transformation for the nation. Numerous examples of the deleterious effect of superstition on women, their children, the family, and society were described, and modern and scientific education was seen as the antidote to this seemingly intractable problem.
Original languageAmerican English
JournalJournal of Chinese Religions
StatePublished - May 2020

Keywords

  • women
  • gender
  • religion
  • superstition
  • Republican period
  • China
  • May Fourth

Disciplines

  • History

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