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Divine Justice: Religion And The Development Of Chinese Legal Culture (Academia Sinica on East Asia)
 
 

Divine Justice: Religion And The Development Of Chinese Legal Culture (Academia Sinica on East Asia) [Hardcover]

Paul R. Katz (Author)

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Book Description

0415443458 978-0415443456 December 3, 2008 1

This book considers the ways in which religious beliefs and practices have contributed to the formation of Chinese legal culture. It does so by describing two forms of overlap between religion and the law: the ideology of justice and the performance of judicial rituals.

One of the most important conceptual underpinnings of the Chinese ideology of justice is the belief in the inevitability of retribution. Similar values permeate Chinese religious traditions, all of which contend that justice will prevail despite corruption and incompetence among judicial officials in this world and even the underworld, with all wrongdoers eventually suffering some form of punishment. The second form of overlap between religion and the law may be found in the realm of practice, and involves instances when men and women perform judicial rituals like oaths, chicken-beheadings, and underworld indictments in order to enhance the legitimacy of their positions, deal with cases of perceived injustice, and resolve disputes. These rites coexist with other forms of legal practice, including private mediation and the courts, comprising a wide-ranging spectrum of practices

Divine Justice will be of enormous interest to scholars of the Chinese legal system and the development of Chinese culture and society more generally.


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Editorial Reviews

Review

'Divine Justice remains a fascinating, stimulating and pioneering study. Its path-breaking approach opens new perspectives for legal specialists, and will surely contribute to the intensification of dialogue between legal studies and other disciplines.' - Claude Chevaleyre, The China Journal, No.63

About the Author

Paul R. Katz is Research Fellow at the Institute of Modern History, Academia Sinica in Taiwan.


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Inside This Book (learn more)
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
ten kings, judicial deities, indictment rites, punitive underworld, indictment rituals, underworld indictment, tomb ordinances, judicial continuum, underworld petitions, ritual plaints, underworld bureaucracy, aggrieved dead, judicial rituals, caotang biji, judicial rites, contingent curses, sepulchral plaints, filing plaints, filing indictments, legalistic rituals, such plaints, exorcistic rituals, underworld deities, seventh lunar month, formal legal procedures
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
City God, United Daily News, Dizang Abbey, Hong Kong, Emperor of the Eastern Peak, China Times, Earth God, Marshal Wen, Judge Bao, Taipei County, Bodhisattva Dizang, Lord Brougham, Earthly Prison, Lord of the Hordes, Ch'en Teng-wu, Straits Settlements, Southern Min, Scripture of Great Peace, Taoyuan County, Ghost Festival, Ch'en Yu-ch'i, Huang Pingying, Qinding Gujin, Warring States, Lin Shuangwen
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