Abstract

This article explores the role that local elites played in the development of the Mazu cult, a local goddess cult in Putian district in late imperial China. I argue that local elites were central in the promotion and transmission of the cult. Through compiling and writing key Confucian texts featuring Mazu, they reshaped, manipulated, and represented certain aspects of her cult in accordance with their interests. As a result of the activities of local elites, Mazu became associated with the Lin lineage, an influential local lineage. In this manner, Mazu came to be seen as an expression of the lineage’s authority, as well as an imperial protector embodying local loyalty to the state and a daughter who was the paradigm filial piety. In addition to the literary production, local elites, in particular the descendants from the Lin lineage, established an ancestral hall of Lin in the port of Xianliang dedicated to Mazu, further sanctioning divinely the local elites’ authority and privilege in the community. I conclude that the locally promoted version of goddess worship operated at the intersection of state interests, Confucian ideology, the agency of local elites, and the dynamics of popular religiosity.

Highlights

  • The focus of this study is the worship of Mazu, one of the most popular goddesses in the Chinese religious landscape

  • I conclude that the locally promoted version of goddess worship operated at the intersection of state interests, Confucian ideology, the agency of local elites, and the dynamics of popular religiosity

  • Lingci miaoji (1332), compiled by Cheng Duanxue, creates an official status for him. It states, “According to the goddess’s surname, Lin, she is the little daughter of a chief military inspector in the Putian district of Xinghua prefecture.”28 The Yuan version of Mazu’s lineage is skeletal in comparison to those developed in the Ming and Qing, but the perception that Mazu is the daughter of a local official became a new feature of Mazu’s family lineage

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Summary

Introduction

The focus of this study is the worship of Mazu, one of the most popular goddesses in the Chinese religious landscape. I explore how the predominant roles of Mazu as a state protector, a descendant from Lin’s family lineage, and a filial daughter were constructed by Confucian literati as idealized images of the goddess that benefited and reinforced certain local interests and patriarchal values. These images embodied traditional virtues tied to women’s subordinate social and religious status in Chinese society. Regarding local elites and Mazu worship, James Watson’s article, “Standardizing the Gods: The Promotion of T’ien Hou (Empress of Heaven) along the South China Coast, 960–1960”, investigates the historical transformation of the cult and its connection with two local lineages in the New Territories of Hongkong.. Through the patronage of local elites, Mazu’s supernatural persona was shaped into an idealized image that represented established Confucian virtues and values, and closely connected with the social and political agenda of powerful lineage

Literature Production and Local Literati from Putian
Mazu as Imperial Protector
Filial Daughter of Meizhou
Conclusions
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