Protestant Funerals in Contemporary Xiamen: Change, Resistance, and Proselytizing in Urban China = $Lchi当代厦门的基督教葬礼 : 中国城市里的变迁、抵抗与传教

Following its designation as a Special Economic Zone in 1980, the Chinese island city of Xiamen has once again become an affluent urban center. This paper explores recent changes in discourse and practice in Xiamen’s historic Protestant community, focusing on funerals and how they could become major...

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Subtitles:$Lchi当代厦门的基督教葬礼
Main Author: Colijn, Bram (Author)
Format: Electronic Article
Language:English
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Published: Brill 2016
In: Review of Religion and Chinese Society
Year: 2016, Volume: 3, Issue: 1, Pages: 25-52
Further subjects:B 葬礼
B 传教
B Modernization
B Proselytizing
B Migration
B 中国基督教
B Chinese Protestantism
B Funerals
B 移民
B 现代化
Online Access: Volltext (Verlag)
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Summary:Following its designation as a Special Economic Zone in 1980, the Chinese island city of Xiamen has once again become an affluent urban center. This paper explores recent changes in discourse and practice in Xiamen’s historic Protestant community, focusing on funerals and how they could become major platforms for proselytizing. Based on data derived from interviews, participant observation, and documents issued by secular or religious authorities, four key processes are identified. First, urban modernization policies of the local state have outlawed—but not quite eradicated—cherished funeral rites like lighting firecrackers and holding funeral marches accompanied by brass bands. Second, modernization efforts by Xiamen’s church leadership have reduced the prevalence of sackcloth and led to changes in services in funeral parlors. Third, large-scale immigration established Mandarin as the dominant language and gave rise to so-called Protestant funeral groups, whose charity work is focused on proselytizing among bereaved families. Fourth, the increasing human and financial resources of Protestants in Xiamen facilitate the mobility of large funeral groups and their use of items such as decorative crosses, musical instruments, and songbooks. The paper concludes that change, resistance to change, and proselytizing at funerals can provide insights for the study of Protestant Christians and their ritual events in China’s burgeoning urban societies.
ISSN:2214-3955
Contains:In: Review of Religion and Chinese Society
Persistent identifiers:DOI: 10.1163/22143955-00202005