Introduction to Special Issue: Between Religious Self-Cultivation and Environmentalism: Changing Meanings of Vegetarianism in Modern China
Nikolas Broy and Matthias Schumann – 2024
Introduction to Special Issue on Religious Vegetarianism in China Together with his co-editor Nikolas Broy, Matthias Schumann recently published an introduction for a special issue on “Between Religious Self-Cultivation and Environmentalism: Changing Meanings of Vegetarianism in Modern China,” which traces the different concepts and practices that were associated with vegetarianism from its earliest history down to the present day. The article appeared in the journal Twentieth-Century China and is available in open access. Abstract: This essay introduces a special issue of Twentieth-Century China that explores the evolution of religiously motivated vegetarianism in Chinese societies from the late imperial period until today, with a focus on the twentieth century. Drawing on ancient practices of fasting and Mahāyāna Buddhist dietary rules, this vegetarianism quickly evolved into a widely accepted form of moral self-cultivation in many religious contexts, one that was intrinsically related to morality, self-actualization, notions of karma and retribution, and ritual purity. Since the late nineteenth century, the impacts of increasing transnational entanglements, new ideas, and changing food practices have subtly transformed this tradition: these transformations include an engagement with global animal protection movements in the wake of the First World War and contemporary attempts to integrate concerns about global warming, food safety, and environmentalism into the discourse. By looking at three specific cases, the special issue traces the persistence and evolution of vegetarian concepts and practices in Chinese societies from the late imperial period until today. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1353/tcc.2024.a938045