Merit and the Millennium

Routine and Crisis in the Ritual Lives of the Lahu People

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December 8, 2020 | History

Merit and the Millennium

Routine and Crisis in the Ritual Lives of the Lahu People

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  • 0 Currently reading
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xxx1, 907 p. : ill., maps; 25 cm.

Publish Date
Language
English
Pages
907

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Edition Availability
Cover of: Merit and the Millennium
Merit and the Millennium: Routine and Crisis in the Ritual Lives of the Lahu People
2003, Hindustan Pub. Corp., New Delhi
Hardcover in English

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Book Details


Table of Contents

Preface (ix-xv)
Notes on Reference Styles and the Provenance of Unpublished and Rare Materials (xxiv-vii)
Orthography and Pronunciation (xxviii-xi)
PART ONE: A LAHU VILLAGE IN NORTH THAILAND AND ITS SOCIO-HISTORICAL MATRICES
Chapter One: The Beginnings of an Odyssey: One Lahu Village in North Thailand (2-49)
Chapter Two: Broadening the Focus: The Lahu People Between Han and Tai (50-108)
PART TWO: THE DIVERSE STRANDS OF LAHU SUPERNATURAL IDEAS AND RITUAL PRACTICES
Chapter Three: Animism and Theism in Lahu Ontology (111-68)
Chapter Four: Calling Back Souls, Dealing with Spirits: Animism in Practice (169-279)
Chapter Five: Garnering Merit, Practising Sorcery: The Extremes of an Animistic Continuum (280-309)
Chapter Six: Mahayana Buddhism in the Lahu Mountains (310-61)
Chapter Seven: Temple Worship: The Cult of the Creator Divinity (362-413)
Chapter Eight: The Cycles of Year and of Life: The Routine of a World View (414-504)
Chapter Nine: Lahu Messiahs and the Search for Utopia (505-47)
PART TEN: THE CHRISTIAN EXPERIENCE: CULTURAL CONTINUITIES AND DISCONTINUITIES
Chapter Ten: Christian Proselytism in the Lahu Mountains (551-628)
Chapter Eleven: The Consolidation of Christianity among the Lahu-speaking peoples (629-733)
Epilogue (734-38
Glossary of Lahu Words (739-52)
Glossary of Chinese Characters (753-67)
Glossary of Words in Thai (Siamese) Script (768-70)
Bibliography of Works Cited (771-842)
Author Index (843-49)
General Index and Glossary (850-907)

Edition Notes

The Lahu mountain folk, numbering some 700,000, are traditionally swidden farmers, who share with other peoples the rugged highlands along the borderlands between China’s Yunnan Province and the Southeast Asian nations of Burma, Laos, Vietnam and Thailand.
Lahu ideas and practices related to the supernatural world include a traditional animism affirming innumerable spirit entities, with varying capacities to protect and to harm mortal beings, and investing culturally significant phenomena with animating soul force. The majority of Lahu recognize an almighty creator-divinity, who is for many the principal focus of worship. The author argues that Mahayana Buddhist monks in Yunnan likely generated this situation during the 18th and 19th centuries, by linking the Lahu’s earlier concept of a non-intervening creator-divinity with their own notions of transcendental Buddhahood. Subsequently, monotheistic Christianity was able to utlize and strengthen an already well-established Lahu theistic tradition.
For 200 years or more, the everyday ritual lives and supportive ideologies of many Lahu communities have been challenged periodically by messianic priests, usually seeking to unite their politically fragmented mountain folk into a wider polity capable of challenging the might of valley-dwelling overlords. A series of theocratic Buddhist monks were significant perpetrators, if not the founders, of Lahu messianism. Important Christian missionaries likewise were seen as messiahs by large numbers of their Lahu followers.

This book, the result of more than 35 years of research in field and library, seeks to explain the diverse ideological strands and associated liturgical practices that inform the worldviews of the Lahu-speaking peoples.
The work is presented in three parts. One: a micro-study of the Lahu community in North Thailand in which the author lived for four years, together with an investigation of that community’s social-historical matrix; Two: an examination of the diverse strands of Lahu supernatural ideas and ritual practices, from routine animo-theism to Mahayana Buddhism and the religio-political crises generated by messianic priests; and Three: a portrayal of the Lahu’s experience with Christianity, a worldview that has attracted about a quarter of the entire ethnic category, in the author’s view because its propagators have been able to manipulate to their advantage the Lahu’s prior messianic traditions.

Published in
New Delhi
Series
Studies in sociology and social anthropology
Genre
Ethnology; religion
Copyright Date
2003

Classifications

Library of Congress
DS523.4.L33 W35 2003

The Physical Object

Format
Hardcover
Pagination
xxxi, 907 p. :
Number of pages
907

ID Numbers

Open Library
OL3718533M
ISBN 10
8170750660
LCCN
2003333908
OCLC/WorldCat
249498372
Goodreads
6040056

Work Description

This book, the result of thirty-five years of research in field and library, seeks to explain the diverse ideological strands and associated liturgical practices that inform the world views of the Tibeto-Burman-speaking Lahu peoples of the Yunnan -Indochina Borderlands.

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Download catalog record: RDF / JSON / OPDS | Wikipedia citation
December 8, 2020 Edited by MARC Bot import existing book
June 5, 2010 Edited by 119.160.133.207 Edited without comment.
April 16, 2010 Edited by bgimpertBot Added goodreads ID.
April 14, 2010 Edited by Open Library Bot Linked existing covers to the edition.
April 1, 2008 Created by an anonymous user Imported from Scriblio MARC record