‘Students of Chinese Buddhism have over recent years written pages upon pages about the movement of relics and the creation of new sacred sites, so the news that these phenomena may now be traced within the Confucian tradition too is exciting indeed. Even more intriguing is the revelation that for all the attention now paid once more to Confucius in China, the site at the heart of this startlingly original study has been abandoned. Is it time for a more nuanced view of Confucianism and modernity?’
T. H. Barrett - (Professor Emeritus, SOAS, University of London), author of The Woman Who Discovered Printing
‘Sima Qian, China's greatest historian (ca. 100 BCE), praised Mencius and Xunzi for making Confucius's Middle Way 'glossy and appealing,' and Julia K. Murray, in multiple books and essays, has performed the same service for today's readers. The Aura of Confucius, her latest contribution, transports us to late Qing and Republican-era Shanghai, where Kongzhai attracted devotees of all types, from emperors on down to humble pilgrims, and then to the start of the Cultural Revolution (1966), when fanatics demolished the shrine in Mao's name. Mirroring China's abrupt twists and turns of late since the Opium War, this elegant history of a sacred shrine is sure to delight and intrigue amateurs and experts alike.’
Michael Nylan - (Professor, University of California at Berkeley), co-author of Lives of Confucius, editor of the Norton Critical Edition of the Analects
‘Murray concludes her search for the historical and physical remains of a now little-known shrine called Kongzhai, which housed relics and images of Confucius. Located on the outskirts of modern-day Shanghai far from Confucius’s birthplace in north China, Kongzhai once stood as a major pilgrimage destination for those in search of encountering the Master’s aura through proximity to his relics and representational images of him. In its heyday, Kongzhai was under the administration of a hereditary branch of Confucius’s direct descendants and visited by the Emperor of China. Kongzhai suffered gradual decay during the twentieth century and was utterly obliterated during the tumultuous years of the Cultural Revolution. No mere chronicle of historical events, The Aura of Confucius is a sweeping visual history of images and relics associated with the Master written by one of the foremost authorities on the material culture of Confucius and cult veneration of him.’
Thomas Wilson - (Bates and Benjamin Professor of Classical and Religious Studies, Hamilton College), author of Genealogy of the Way and co-author of Lives of Confucius
‘In this compelling work, Murray tracks the development of the Kongzhai shrine over time through her focus on the site’s buried relics, sculpted images, painted portraits, and illustrated biographies. Murray’s exceptional book joins other efforts to revise some of the long-held outmoded views about Confucianism as a non-religious ethical system that had allegedly replaced its icons and images with ancestor tablets in the 16th century. The history of the Kongzhai provides a particularly valuable window that has allowed Murray to reveal the religious aspects of the Confucius cult that others have had a vested interest in dismissing, forgetting, or destroying.’
James Robson - (James C. Kralik and Yunli Lou Professor and Director of the Asia Center, Harvard University), author of The Power of Place: The Religious Landscape of the Southern Sacred Peak (Nanyue) in Medieval China
‘Julia Murray is among our most accomplished historians of Chinese art. In this unique study Murray deploys a vast interdisciplinary knowledge of Confucian art, ritual, scripture, and material culture to unlock the mysteries of Kongzhai, and to explore the beliefs that helped the shrine flourish and then fade into obscurity.’
James A. Flath - Professor of History, Western University
‘Julia Murray has provided an outstandingly rich and thought-provoking account, which will be of enduring value.’
Craig Clunas
Source: Journal of Chinese History
'The Aura of Confucius is a model study of a single place and its sources, treated in depth and breadth. It brings fresh detail to the social history of the Lower Yangtze region and usefully expands the boundaries of conventional art history.'
Susan Naquin
Source: Journal of Oriental Studies
‘Those with an interest in Chinese religion have much to gain from this volume.’
Joseph Chadwin
Source: Religious Studies Review
‘… through scrupulous attention to detail, Murray addresses issues that should be of interest to us all, including the old question of whether Confucianism should be considered a religion or a philosophy; how social, cultural, and material resources can be manipulated to produce something so compelling as Kongzhai; and how easily the numinous site can fade away when those resources disappear.’
James Flath
Source: Journal Of Religious History