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Christianity is often praised as an agent of Chinese modernization
or damned as a form of cultural and religious imperialism. In both
cases, Christianity's foreignness and the social isolation of
converts have dominated this debate. Eugenio Menegon uncovers
another story. In the sixteenth century, European missionaries
brought a foreign and global religion to China. Converts then
transformed this new religion into a local one over the course of
the next three centuries. Focusing on the still-active Catholic
communities of Fuan county in northeast Fujian, this project
addresses three main questions. Why did people convert? How did
converts and missionaries transform a global and foreign religion
into a local religion? What does Christianity's localization in
Fuan tell us about the relationship between late imperial Chinese
society and religion? Based on an impressive array of sources from
Asia and Europe, this pathbreaking book reframes our understanding
of Christian missions in Chinese-Western relations. The study's
implications extend beyond the issue of Christianity in China to
the wider fields of religious and social history and the early
modern history of global intercultural relations. The book suggests
that Christianity became part of a preexisting pluralistic, local
religious space, and argues that we have so far underestimated late
imperial society's tolerance for "heterodoxy." The view from Fuan
offers an original account of how a locality created its own
religious culture in Ming-Qing China within a context both global
and local, and illuminates the historical dynamics contributing to
the remarkable growth of Christian communities in present-day
China.
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