Condensing Life Substances within the House: The Rice-Boiling Shuhi of Southwest China

Author:

Hsu Elisabeth1,Huber Franz K.2ORCID,Weckerle Caroline S.3

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Social and Cultural Anthropology, University of Oxford, 51/53 Banbury Road, Oxford, OX2 6PE, UK

2. ETH Zürich, Institute for Environmental Decisions, Sonneggstrasse 33, 8092 Zurich, Switzerland

3. Institute of Systematic Botany, University of Zürich, Zollikerstrasse 107, 8008 Zürich, Switzerland

Abstract

Abstract The Shuhi of Muli County, Sichuan Province, are one of multiple ethnic groups inhabiting the river gorges of the Qinghai-Gansu-Sichuan corridor between the Tibetan plateau and the Chinese lowlands. The Shuhi have grown paddy rice since times immemorial at an unusually high altitude (ca. 2,300 m above sea level). This article aims to explain this conundrum not merely through the ecology (as is common among Tibetan area specialists), but by researching the cultivation and consumption of rice as a historically-evolved cultural practice. According to a recently formulated agro-archaeological hypothesis regarding the macro-region of Eurasia, it is possible to identify two supra-regional culture complexes distinguished by their respective culinary technologies: rice-boiling versus wheat-grinding-and-baking. The hypothesis posits that the fault line between the two supra-regional cultural complexes is precisely along this river gorges corridor. In this article we provide support for this hypothesis arguing that Shuhi ritual and kinship practices have much affinity with those of other rice-boiling peoples in Southeast Asia, whereas certain of their current religious practices are shared with the wheat-grinding Tibetans.

Publisher

Walter de Gruyter GmbH

Reference38 articles.

1. Aijmer, Göran (2004): New Year Celebrations in Central China in Late Imperial Times. Hongkong: Chinese University Press.

2. Büeler, Franziska (2010): Ethnobotanical Study among Ethnic Groups in the Shuiluo Valley, Southwest China: Local Knowledge of Ritual Plant Use. Unpublished Master Thesis in Ethnobotany. Zürich: University of Zürich.

3. Carsten, Janet / Hugh-Jones, Stephen (eds.) (1995): About the House: Lévi-Strauss and Beyond. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

4. Chard, Robert L. (1995): “Rituals and Scriptures of the Stove God”. In: Ritual and Scripture in Chinese Popular Religion: Five Studies. Edited by David Johnson. Berkeley: Institute of East Asian Studies Publications, 3–54.

5. Chirkova, Katia (2009): “Shixing, a Sino-Tibetan Language of South-West China: A Grammatical Sketch with Two Appended Texts”. Linguistics of the Tibeto-Burman Area 32.1: 1–90.

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