Current Publications

Contemporary Filiality and Popular Religion

Author(s)
Joseph Chadwin
Abstract

Whether one opts to refer to it as filial piety, filial obedience, family reverence, and family feeling, or filiality, the concept of xiào has been widely studied throughout history. However, to this day, the religious dimension of xiào is far too often ignored. This article intends to demonstrate that beyond merely having a religious dimension to it, the very concept of xiào cannot be removed from the realm of Chinese popular religion. More specifically, this article constitutes an ethnographic examination of the beliefs and practices pertaining to xiào of undergraduate university students in Beijing. These beliefs and practices will be compared and contrasted with how xiào is regarded by the parents of these students. By demonstrating that xiào essentially constitutes a religious belief that has deep meaning and importance to all the interviewees of this study, this article adds to the growing corpus of scholarship that seeks to contrast the popular view that China is a deeply irreligious country. I will also assert that there is a notable generational difference in how xiào is conceived.

Organisation(s)
Department of Religious Studies
Journal
Open Theology
Volume
9
ISSN
2300-6579
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1515/opth-2022-0238
Publication date
01-2023
Peer reviewed
Yes
Austrian Fields of Science 2012
603904 Hinduism
Keywords
ASJC Scopus subject areas
Religious studies
Portal url
https://ucris.univie.ac.at/portal/en/publications/contemporary-filiality-and-popular-religion(cf487c35-7d01-4e95-9dcb-eb567d09e09d).html