This book explores the single Chinese concept and practice of shaping the mind through educationjiaohuafrom multi-disciplinary perspectives, with a view to furthering the understanding of jiaohua, and of China more broadly. It proceeds from the assumption that the concept has played a critical role over at least two millennia in what Benjamin Schwartz described as Chinas common socio-political patterns and common cultural orientations and holds a key to understanding Chinese culture and societies as a whole. Though a large body of scholarship in Chinese and English has shed light on various aspects of the concept, its shifting sociological significance, as it is oriented toward social questions and functions, remains under-examined. The book develops a better understanding of jiaohua on the basis of greater conceptual clarity and a broader perspective than can be found in the extant literature. In considering a range of social domains and various schools of thought on the one hand, and on the other, major shifts in the meaning, functions, and significance of jiaohua from the past to the present, this book is indispensable to students and scholars researching the various facets of Chinese society, philosophy, and culture.
Chapter
1. Reconstructing Confucianism as an Edification (Jiaohua)
Tradition: A New Trend in Chinas Contemporary Confucian Revival.
Chapter
2.
The Scripture on Great Peace: A Daoist Approach to the Peoples Edification.-
Chapter
3. Buddhist Jiaohua: Edification and the Practice of Buddhist
Storytelling.
Chapter
4. Jiaohua through Humanistic Buddhism: From Master
Taixu to Master Xingyun.
Chapter
5. Moral Cultivation in the Chinese Legal
System: Contradiction or Complementary Relationship?.
Chapter
6. Jiaohua in
Ming Collections of Gongan Short Stories: Law, Punishment, and Popular
Conceptions of Justice.
Chapter
7. Theatre as a Conveyor of the Way: Moral
Education and Transformation through Mulianxi in Premodern China.
Chapter
8.
Tool of Domination or Road to Subjectification: Rethinking Jiaohua in a
Modern and Contemporary Confucian Context.
Chapter
9. Confucianism, Legalism
and Jiaohua: Competing Traditions in Chinese Higher Education.
Chapter
10.
Two Visions, Two Talks: Jiaohua in Maos Yanan Talks and Xis Beijing
Talks.
Chapter
11. Jiaohua: Shaping Peoples Mind through Education in the
Xi Jinping Era.
Yingjie Guo is Professor in Chinese Studies. He received his B.A. and M.A. from Shanghai International Studies University, China, and Ph.D. from the University of Tasmania, Australia. His research focuses on China's cultural nationalism and Chinese cultural identities and the discourse of class in post-Mao China. He is Author of Cultural Nationalism in Contemporary China: Searching for National identity under Reform and Co-Author of Nationalism, National Identity and Democratization in China. His recent publications include Unequal China: Political Economy and Culture Politics, Handbook of Class and Stratification in the Peoples Republic of China, and Local Elites in Post-Mao China.