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Qigong Fever: Body, Science, and Utopia in China
 
 
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Qigong Fever: Body, Science, and Utopia in China [Hardcover]

David A. Palmer (Author)
4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)

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Book Description

March 20, 2007 0231140665 978-0231140669 1

Qigong—a regimen of body, breath, and mental training exercises—was one of the most widespread cultural and religious movements of late-twentieth-century urban China. The practice was promoted by senior Communist Party leaders as a uniquely Chinese healing tradition and as a harbinger of a new scientific revolution, yet the movement's mass popularity and the almost religious devotion of its followers led to its ruthless suppression.

In this absorbing and revealing book, David A. Palmer relies on a combination of historical, anthropological, and sociological perspectives to describe the spread of the qigong craze and its reflection of key trends that have shaped China since 1949, including the search for a national identity and an emphasis on the absolute authority of science. Qigong offered the promise of an all-powerful technology of the body rooted in the mysteries of Chinese culture. However, after 1995 the scientific underpinnings of qigong came under attack, its leaders were denounced as charlatans, and its networks of followers, notably Falungong, were suppressed as "evil cults."

According to Palmer, the success of the movement proves that a hugely important religious dimension not only survived under the CCP but was actively fostered, if not created, by high-ranking party members. Tracing the complex relationships among the masters, officials, scientists, practitioners, and ideologues involved in qigong, Palmer opens a fascinating window on the transformation of Chinese tradition as it evolved along with the Chinese state. As he brilliantly demonstrates, the rise and collapse of the qigong movement is key to understanding the politics and culture of post-Mao society.

(11/1/2007)

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Editorial Reviews

Review

"A powerful historical, political, cultural, and sociological analysis of the Qigong movement and its relationship to the state... Essential." -Choice

(Choice 2009, No 4)

A brilliant piece of scholarship... it is to be hoped that this excellent book reaches a wide readership.

(David Ownby Pacific Affairs Vol. 49, No. 4)

The most comprehensive volume published on the Qigong movement in contemporary China.

(Gareth Fisher Journal of Chinese Religions )

[A] remarkable study... the best work in its field.

(Journal of Social History )

Qigong Fever provides original and profound insights into Chinese social and political history over the last 60 years.

(Georges Favroud China Perspectives )

David Palmer's fascinating and solidly researched Qigong Fever represents the first serious English-language history of the qigong explosion that rocked China over the course of the 1980s and 1990s

(Patricia M. Thornton History of Religions )

Review

This is a pathbreaking study, elegantly written and meticulously researched. It constitutes the first thorough analysis of qigong and its many mutations between state and society in China and offers an original interpretation of the suppression of the Falungong movement in 1999. Qigong Fever is indispensable to the field of Chinese studies but also to the more general topics of religion and modernity.

(Frank Dikötter, School of Oriental and African Studies, author of The Discourse of Race in Modern China Vol. 35 (2007))

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 356 pages
  • Publisher: Columbia University Press; 1 edition (March 20, 2007)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0231140665
  • ISBN-13: 978-0231140669
  • Product Dimensions: 8.6 x 5.5 x 1.2 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.3 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #133,618 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Average Customer Review
4.6 out of 5 stars (5 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The most Important Qigong Book, May 5, 2009
This review is from: Qigong Fever: Body, Science, and Utopia in China (Hardcover)
I don't like giving book reviews because people can slant the sales of someone; but being a practitioner and teacher of Qigong and have studied some of the methods and with some of the teachers listed in the book, this book is so good that I feel compelled to step up and give my 5 stars to it.

This book outlines a important part of modern qigong history and it's roots.
Not a book to study from but rather a step back into the whole qigong fever craze that Dr. Palmer defines from a field practitioner level. He takes you from the beginning and to the end of its great era in China. This book would for sure be a great movie if it could be recreated.

It describes alot of the great things in qigong as well as the not so great such as the "Qi for big money teachers", which exist today in the west. This book should be a shinning example for would be teachers and groups what not to do and why Qigong practices need to be free from Governmental,Associations & so called Qi expert's controlling agencies.

The book also outlines the rise and fall of falun gong and how falun gong destroyed the whole open qigong training & practice in china. How the PRC had banned Qigong training in china and how it has reduced to a sports exercise only.

A book that you will read over and over again a must have if you practice any form of Qigong or Taijiquan.



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7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Very informative, February 15, 2008
This review is from: Qigong Fever: Body, Science, and Utopia in China (Hardcover)
I don't think I would agree with all the analysis of Chinese government and politics in the book. But I was amazed by the amount of details the author was able to collect and clearly presented about the Qigong related events in China's recent history. Much of these were very informative for Chinese and foreigners alike. Since Qigong is a significant part of Chinese culture and heritage from their more than 5 thousand years history, I think this book is valuable for those who are interested in China and Chinese culture.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Tour de Force, February 15, 2011
By 
This review is from: Qigong Fever: Body, Science, and Utopia in China (Hardcover)
Palmer's brilliant retelling and analysis of modern Chi Kung history deserves the applause it has received from all quarters.

Everything's here: the initial impulse in the fifties to turn the traditional body technologies into modern healing sciences; their temporary choking in the atmosphere of deadly top-down dogma during the Great Leap Forward and Cultural Revolution periods; the practitioners like Guo Lin who kept teaching even when you could be arrested for it, so that cancers could be cured; the sudden upsurge of the modality after the Deng reforms, leading to the period of 'Fever' when every Beijing park had a dozen systems, masters grew charismatic, and stories of strange psi powers abounded; the 'new Chinese science' promised, that would make real at last the utopia the people had believed in so long; the strange experiments, the miracles, the fakes, the government nervousness; the commercialization of the spiritual past; and finally the advent of that cynical, millenarian, messianic, sectarian, religious Jungian shadow of the Communist party itself, falun gong, which told the rest it could go to hell.

On every spiritual, scientific, cultural and historical level this is one of the most astonishing tales you will ever hear! And in David Palmer it's found a worthy storyteller. He has not only done the most tremendous amount of research, he manages to keep a sense of drama in laying it out that is sadly lacking in all too many academic treatises. Probably better informed than all of those without his bardic flair (I've read some of 'em), he finds no need to namecheck trendy po-mo theorists to keep to his brief, and when he does bring in theoretical architecture, it is genuinely illuminating. He also puts the whole period in context by referring to older movements in China that foreshadow it. (I hear he's working on some very interesting new projects, including a study of the global spread of Taoism with Elijah Siegler -- I'll be looking out for that.)

The book is also a treatment of the Chi Kung subject that manages to make a case for its importance without being in any way biased. Palmer states his own practice was "powerful", involving mental and physical change that made him feel "anything was possible", and putting academic objectivity in jeopardy -- nonetheless, throughout the body of the text he sedulously avoids claims about effectiveness or the truth of any 'extraordinary powers', leaving the history of the practice and the power it has exerted on its practitioners to speak for themselves. This scrupulously fair rendering adds a most useful flavour of careful reason to such a combustible historical cocktail of powerful spiritual techniques and experiences with all-too-human beliefs and hopes. You couldn't wish for more interesting times.

I've read this book twice now and will do so again I'm sure. I think just about anyone would be interested in it if the sociology, psychology, religious politics and spirit-power stuff grab them. But if you practice any form of Chi Kung at all, don't miss it. You will get a compelling grounding in the history and source of your practice that isn't obtainable anywhere else.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
A few years before the founding of the People's Republic of China in 1949 a group of Communist cadres in the mountains of the South Hebei Liberated Zone discovered an ancient technique that, at almost no cost, could bring health and vigour to the sickly and impoverished masses. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
sports commission, sports minister, great dharma, gigong movement, gigong circles, gigong associations, local training stations, somatic scientists, gigong method, provincial sports commission, somatic science, gigong therapy, gigong masters, gigong practitioners, gigong practice, qigong movement, qigong therapy, qigong associations, qigong masters, new scientific revolution, body cultivation, sectarian milieu, body technologies, qigong practitioners, qigong practice
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Extraordinary Powers, Yan Xin, Zhang Hongbao, Qian Xuesen, Liu Guizhen, Guo Lin, Zhang Zhenhuan, Cultural Revolution, Kang Xiaoguang, North America, United States, State Council, Zhang Honglin, Working Group, Zhang Baosheng, Chen Linfeng, Liu Shanglin, Hong Kong, Zhuan Falun, Sima Nan, Qin Hui, People's Daily, Essential Points, Deng Xiaoping, Liu Xinyu
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Front Cover | First Pages | Index | Back Cover | Surprise Me!
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