Sangam: A Confluence of Knowledge Streams

Xiuzhen (Immortality Cultivation) Fantasy: Science, Religion, and the Novels of Magic/Superstition in Contemporary China

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dc.creator Ni, Zhange
dc.date 2020-01-10T14:38:58Z
dc.date 2020-01-10T14:38:58Z
dc.date 2020-01-02
dc.date 2020-01-10T09:02:35Z
dc.date.accessioned 2023-03-01T18:51:26Z
dc.date.available 2023-03-01T18:51:26Z
dc.identifier Ni, Z. Xiuzhen (Immortality Cultivation) Fantasy: Science, Religion, and the Novels of Magic/Superstition in Contemporary China. Religions 2020, 11, 25.
dc.identifier http://hdl.handle.net/10919/96386
dc.identifier https://doi.org/10.3390/rel11010025
dc.identifier.uri http://localhost:8080/xmlui/handle/CUHPOERS/281510
dc.description In early twenty-first-century China, online fantasy is one of the most popular literary genres. This article studies a subgenre of Chinese fantasy named <i>xiuzhen</i> 修真 (immortality cultivation), which draws on Daoist alchemy in particular and Chinese religion and culture in general, especially that which was negatively labelled &ldquo;superstitious&rdquo; in the twentieth century, to tell exciting adventure stories. <i>Xiuzhen</i> fantasy is indebted to <i>wuxia </i><i>xiaoshuo</i> 武俠小說 (martial arts novels), the first emergence of Chinese fantasy in the early twentieth century after the translation of the modern Western discourses of science, religion, and superstition. Although martial arts fiction was suppressed by the modernizing nation-state because it contained the unwanted elements of magic and supernaturalism, its reemergence in the late twentieth century paved the way for the rise of its successor, <i>xiuzhen</i> fantasy. As a type of magical arts fiction, <i>xiuzhen</i> reinvents Daoist alchemy and other &ldquo;superstitious&rdquo; practices to build a cultivation world which does not escape but engages with the dazzling reality of digital technology, neoliberal governance, and global capitalism. In this fantastic world, the divide of magic and science breaks down; religion, defined not by faith but embodied practice, serves as the organizing center of society, economy, and politics. Moreover, the subject of martial arts fiction that challenged the sovereignty of the nation-state has evolved into the neoliberal <i>homo economicus</i> and its non-/anti-capitalist alternatives. Reading four exemplary <i>xiuzhen</i> novels, Journeys into the Ephemeral (Piaomiao zhilv 飄渺之旅), <i>The Buddha Belongs to the Dao</i> (<i>Foben</i><i> </i><i>shidao</i> 佛本是道), <i>Spirit Roaming</i> (<i>Shenyou</i> 神遊), and <i>Immortality Cultivation 40K</i> (<i>Xiuzhen</i><i> </i><i>siwannian</i> 修真四萬年), this article argues that <i>xiuzhen</i> fantasy provides a platform on which the postsocialist generation seek to orient themselves in the labyrinth of contemporary capitalism by rethinking the modernist triad of religion, science, and superstition.
dc.description Published version
dc.format application/pdf
dc.format application/pdf
dc.language en
dc.publisher MDPI
dc.rights Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International
dc.rights http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
dc.subject Xiuzhen (immortality cultivation)
dc.subject fantasy
dc.subject internet literature
dc.subject religion
dc.subject science
dc.subject magic/superstition
dc.title Xiuzhen (Immortality Cultivation) Fantasy: Science, Religion, and the Novels of Magic/Superstition in Contemporary China
dc.title Religions
dc.type Article - Refereed
dc.type Text


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