Merit and the Millennium: Routine and Crisis in the Ritual Lives of the Lahu People

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The Lahu mountain people, numbering some 700,000, are traditionally Swidden farmers, sharing with other peoples the rugged highlands that form the borderlands between China’s Yunnan Province and the Southeast Asian nations of Burma, Laos, Vietnam and Thailand. Lahu ideas and practices related to the supernatural world include a traditional animism that affirms innumerable spirit entities with varying capacities to protect and to harm mortal beings, and that invests culturally significant phenomena with animating soul force. The majority of Lahu recognize an almighty creator-divinity, who is for many the principal focus of worship. The author argues that Mahayana Buddhist monks in Yunnan likely generated this situation during the 18 and 19 centuries, by merging the Lahu’s earlier concept of a non-intervening creator-divinity with their own notions of transcendental Buddhahood. Subsequently, monotheistic Christianity was able to utilize and strengthen an already well-established Lahu the

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Bibliographic information

Title
Merit and the Millennium: Routine and Crisis in the Ritual Lives of the Lahu People
Author
Edition
1st ed.
Publisher
ISBN
8170750660
Length
xxxi+907p., Plates; Maps; Figures; 25cm.
Subjects