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From Yao to now: Daoism and the imperialization of the China/Southeast Asia borderlands
Authors:Eli Noah Alberts
Affiliation:1. Department of History, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, CO, USAeli.alberts@colostate.edu
Abstract:This article investigates the adoption of Daoist ritual among the Yao peoples in South China and mainland Southeast Asia. The Song Dynasty imperial court patronized new Daoist ritual traditions that harnessed martial deities such as the Thunder Gods. Although these traditions were mostly southern in origin, it is not until the Qing dynasty that we find evidence for their circulation among the Yao. After discussing historical representations of Yao religion from the Song to the Qing dynasty and the specific historical contexts that gave rise to each representation, I conclude by examining how beliefs and practices derived from these same Daoist ritual traditions were active among the Iu Mien in Laos during the Second Indochina War. What is needed is an analysis that links a specific ethnographic or historiographic representation with a broader understanding of local, regional, and even transnational ritual practices in the borderlands of China and Southeast Asia.
Keywords:Yao peoples  Iu Mien  Daoism  Thunder Rites  martial spirits
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