FA-56424-12 | Research Programs: Fellowships for University Teachers | Sarah Schneewind | Shrines to Living Officials and Political Participation in Ming China, 1368-1644 | 7/1/2012 - 6/30/2013 | $50,400.00 | Sarah | | Schneewind | | | | Regents of the University of California, San Diego | La Jolla | CA | 92093-0013 | USA | 2011 | East Asian History | Fellowships for University Teachers | Research Programs | 50400 | 0 | 50400 | 0 |
Ming people inherited and created a landscape dotted with temples and shrines honoring not only deities, but men and women. Scholars have studied shrines to dead people, but have hardly noticed a very common set of shrines to men who were still alive. Ideally built by local commoners sorry to part with a good official moving to another post, pre-mortem shrines were legal, accepted, and ubiquitous. They could be temporary or permanent, large or small; some men were enshrined together, while one county magistrate had an image in each home. This first book on pre-mortem shrines will focus on Ming, whose autocratic, bureaucratic monarchy is often seen as the height of despotism in China, and posed as the defining other to a democratizing Europe. I will show that Ming subjects, not just elite men but also commoners, used pre-mortem shrines to claim roles in politics, claims recognized as legitimate within the Mandate of Heaven ideology that justified imperial power. |