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Fengshui in China
Geomantic Divination Between State Orthodoxy
and Popular Religion
by Ole Bruun, Roskilde University Centre

For well over a century, Chinese fengshui – or ‘geomancy’ – has interested Western laymen and scholars. Today, hundreds of popular manuals claim to use its principles in their advice on how people can increase their wealth, happiness, longevity, etc. This study is quite different, approaching fengshui from an academic angle.

The focus is on fengshui’s significance in China, but its recent reinterpretation in the west is also depicted. The author argues that fengshui serves as an alternative tradition of cosmological knowledge, which is used to explain a range of everyday occurrences in rural areas such as disease, mental disorders, accidents and common mischief. Although Chinese authorities have opposed the tradition for centuries, nonetheless it has been used by almost everyone as an aspect of popular cosmology. Opposing the Chinese collectivist ethos and moralizing from above, fengshui represents an alternative vision of reality.

The study includes a historical account of fengshui over the last 150 years, augmented by anthropological fieldwork on contemporary practices in two Chinese rural areas. Aiming to eschew western intellectual preconceptions and penetrate the confused mass of old texts and divergent local practices, the book will be of interest to anyone seeking to understand an undercurrent of China’s transformation.

Published by NIAS Press, NIAS Man and Nature Series # 8
Hardback publ. 2003, 320 pp., illustrated
ISBN 978 87 91114 79 3, hardback, £50.00