Skip to product information
1 of 1

A Time of Lost Gods

Regular price $34.95
Sale price $34.95 Regular price $34.95
Sale Sold out
Traversing visible and invisible realms, A Time of Lost Gods attends to profound rereadings of politics, religion, and madness in the cosmic accounts of spirit mediumship. Drawing on research acros...
Read More
  • Format:
  • 12 May 2020
View Product Details
Traversing visible and invisible realms, A Time of Lost Gods attends to profound rereadings of politics, religion, and madness in the cosmic accounts of spirit mediumship. Drawing on research across a temple, a psychiatric unit, and the home altars of spirit mediums in a rural county of China’s Central Plain, it asks: What ghostly forms emerge after the death of Mao and the so-called end of history?

The story of religion in China since the market reforms of the late 1970s is often told through its destruction under Mao and relative flourishing thereafter. Here, those who engage in mediumship offer a different history of the present. They approach Mao’s reign not simply as an earthly secular rule, but an exceptional interval of divine sovereignty, after which the cosmos collapsed into chaos. Caught between a fading era and an ever-receding horizon, those “left behind” by labor outmigration refigure the evacuated hometown as an ethical-spiritual center to come, amidst a proliferation of madness-inducing spirits. Following pronouncements of China’s rise, and in the wake of what Chinese intellectuals termed semicolonialism, the stories here tell of spirit mediums, patients, and psychiatrists caught in a shared dilemma, in a time when gods have lost their way.
 
files/i.png Icon
Price: $34.95
Pages: 224
Publisher: University of California Press
Imprint: University of California Press
Publication Date: 12 May 2020
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9780520303034
Format: Paperback
BISACs:

"A Time of Lost Gods is a most welcome addition to our understandings of religion and psychiatry in contemporary China."
Emily Ng is Postdoctoral Researcher at the Amsterdam School for Cultural Analysis, University of Amsterdam. 
Prologue: We Never Should Have Met

Introduction: The China of China
1. After the Storm 
2. Ten Thousand Years
3. Spectral Collision
4. A Soul Adrift
5. Vertiginous Abbreviation
Coda: Those Who Remain

Acknowledgments
Notes
References
Index