Tag: Daoism

Daoism, Dandyism, and Political Correctness


Free Download Thorsten Botz-Bornstein, "Daoism, Dandyism, and Political Correctness "
English | ISBN: 1438494521 | 2023 | 226 pages | EPUB, PDF | 1040 KB + 2 MB
How would Zhuangzi, a Chinese philosopher who lived in the fourth century BCE, have reacted to the recent linguistic reforms commonly referred to as "political correctness"? Zhuangzi was a language skeptic, which means that he did not believe that language could convey the true meanings of the world. Might Zhuangzi have argued that political correctness creates but a dream world made of rules, policies, and words-no more real than when he "dreamt he was a butterfly"? Written in a provocative tone, this book looks at political correctness through the lens of ancient Chinese philosophy, as well as through Brummell’s and Wilde’s aesthetic philosophy of dandyism. Several scholars have established links between Zhuangzi and dandyism, and Wilde wrote one of the first reviews of Herbert Giles’s English translation of the

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The Ming Prince and Daoism Institutional Patronage of an Elite


Free Download Richard G. Wang, "The Ming Prince and Daoism: Institutional Patronage of an Elite"
English | 2012 | pages: 332 | ISBN: 0199767688 | PDF | 2,8 mb
Scholars of Daoism in the Ming dynasty (1368-1644) have paid particular attention to the interaction between the court and certain Daoist priests and to the political results of such interaction; the focus has been on either emperors or Daoist masters. Yet in the Ming era, a special group of people patronized Daoism and Daoist establishments: these were the members of the imperial clan, who were enfeoffed as princes. By illuminating the role the Ming princes played in local religion, Richard G. Wang demonstrates in The Ming Prince and Daoism that the princedom served to mediate between official religious policy and the commoners’ interests.

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