Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Notes on Contributors
- List of Tables and Figures
- Introduction States, Consumption and Managing Religions
- Part I From Deprivitization to Securitization
- Part II From Pietism to Consumerism
- Chapter 8 Chinese Religion, Market Society and the State
- Chapter 9 Hindu Normalization, Nationalism and Consumer Mobilization
- Chapter 10 Clash of Secularity and Religiosity: The Staging of Secularism and Islam through the Icons of Atatürk and the Veil in Turkey
- Chapter 11 Gramsci, Jediism, the Standardization of Popular Religion and the State
- Part III Concluding Comments
Chapter 8 - Chinese Religion, Market Society and the State
from Part II - From Pietism to Consumerism
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 May 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Notes on Contributors
- List of Tables and Figures
- Introduction States, Consumption and Managing Religions
- Part I From Deprivitization to Securitization
- Part II From Pietism to Consumerism
- Chapter 8 Chinese Religion, Market Society and the State
- Chapter 9 Hindu Normalization, Nationalism and Consumer Mobilization
- Chapter 10 Clash of Secularity and Religiosity: The Staging of Secularism and Islam through the Icons of Atatürk and the Veil in Turkey
- Chapter 11 Gramsci, Jediism, the Standardization of Popular Religion and the State
- Part III Concluding Comments
Summary
Introduction
The familiar discussion of the nexus between religion and economy has emblematic representation in Max Weber's classic account of the elective affinity between Calvinism and the spirit of modern capitalism (Weber, 1991). Weber's demonstration of the supportive role of religious belief for capitalistic development is reversed, however, in his treatment of the history of China in which it is argued that Confucianism and Daoism had a compelling restraining impact on economic rationalization (Weber, 1964). This reversal has an additional dimension, insofar as an unintended consequence of the development of an expanding market economy and concomitant industrialization in China since the Deng Xiaoping reforms in 1978 has been to provide a space for religious expression unprecedented since the advent of the communist regime in 1949, and possibly even before this time given the predominantly negative policies toward religion by the state during the republican period from 1912. Indeed, since the onset of the reform period in the 1980s there has been not only more evidence of religious commitment and activity in both rural and urban areas but also changes in the nature of individual religions and in the numbers of religious adherents.
The most striking religious changes in the People's Republic of China (PRC) over the last 25 or so years have been twofold. The first consists of the reforms in both Buddhism and Daoism, especially in outreach and growth in the numbers of temples, priests and adherents or participants, which have largely been state sponsored or supported.
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- Religion and the StateA Comparative Sociology, pp. 185 - 206Publisher: Anthem PressPrint publication year: 2011
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