 264 pp. May 1998
cloth, ISBN 978-0-8248-1800-5, $41.00
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Keywords: |
China religion history Asia |
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Great Perfection: Religion and Ethnicity in a Chinese Millennial Kingdom
by Terry F. Kleeman
"Thoroughly researched and engagingly written.... A breakthrough in the study of early Daoism in terms of both scope of topic and methodology." --China Review International, Spring 1999"A stimulating work.... The reader will be grateful for the the well-translated and meticulously annotated source materials." --T'oung Pao LXXXVI (2000)
Great Perfection tells the story of the Ba people and the Li family in particular. Engaging the most recent scholarship in Western, Chinese, and Japanese languages (including archaeological and ethnic publications), the study begins in the mists of prehistory, traces the early of the Ba, chronicles the rise of the Daoist faith and their role in it, then sets forth in detal a chronicle of the state of Great Perfection. Central to the work is a translation of all surviving historical records concerning the state, which have been conflated here in an attempt to reconstruct the lost Book of the Lis of Sichuan, a contemporary first-hand source by the state's historian. As the first study in any Western language devoted to the Ba or to the Great Perfection kingdom, this volume breaks new ground in Chinese ethnography and history. As the first book-length treatment of a Daoist millennial kingdom, it is a major contribution to the history of early Daoism and a significant addition to scholarship on apocalyptic thought worldwide. Its masterly handling of scattered sources and the vexed issues of ethnic history makes Great Perfection required reading for historians.
Terry F. Kleeman is assistant professor of East Asian religions at the College of William and Mary.
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