Abstract
Ever since the enlightenment—the dawn of the modern era—historical understanding has been much concerned with the passage to modernity. In our present century, questions and dilemmas of the transition to modernity and the evaluation of “tradition” in the non-Western world have been central to the historical problematique the world over. I have chosen to analyze the modernist understanding of this historical transition in China not only among professional historians in the West, but among Chinese advocates of modernity. Specifically, I will examine the campaigns attacking popular religion during the first three decades of this century. As a movement advocating the establishment of a rational society, these campaigns offer a view of the understanding of this transition, not just in theory and historiography, but in practice.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Reference41 articles.
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2. Thompson Roger . 1988a. “Communities under Fire: Christians in Shanxi, 1862–1909.” Unpublished paper delivered at “The Historical Legacy of Religion in China.”
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