Date | 2025 |
Collection | Ricci Institute Library |
Language | English |
Record_type | Article (in Periodical) |
Shelf | Digital Archives |
Call Number | BX154.C4 L59 2025 |
Description | 20 p. |
Note | Shamanism and Christianity: models of religious encounters in East Asia / Yang Li Religions 16 (2025) Local access dig.pfd [Li-Shamanism and Christianity.pdf] Abstract: When exploring interactions between Christianity and other religions in East Asia, the place given to the shamanic tradition remains ambiguous and marginal. This ar‑ ticle analyzes the religious encounters between shamanism and Christianity in East Asia through specific and representative case studies. This article is divided into three main parts. Section 1 introduces the core terms “shamanism” and “diffusionism”, explaining their general meanings and the specific ways they are used in this study, and provides a regional overview of the cases analyzed in this paper. Sections 2–4 present the historical context and analysis of religious encounters in regions such as Siberia, Mongolia, China (including Taiwan, Southwest China, and Northeast China), Korea, etc. Sections 5 and 6 seek to demonstrate that shamanism operates according to two models: the first character‑ ized by “segregation” and the second by “diffusion”, noting that these models exist on a dynamic continuum. In most historical situations, this study argues that shamanism ini‑ tially encountered Christianity in a segregation mode, often leading to significant conflicts between the two. Over time, as shamanism’s religious attributes weakened, it paradox‑ ically adapted to a diffusion model, integrating its ethos into other religions, including Christianity. The diffusion model has thus become an appropriate way to understand the current existent form of shamanism in East Asia. |
Subject | Christianity--East Asia Intercultural communication Christianity and other religions--Asian |