Talk:Soil and grain

Latest comment: 1 year ago by LlywelynII in topic Sources for article expansion
[Q:] Metaphor or deity?
[A: Neither. Entirely irrelevent public theory on a different continent within a different tradition that viewed power as absolute instead of constrained by custom, natural order, obligations, familial interests, &c.]

On the 神 problem edit

神 is usually translated as "gods" but it doesn't have all the meaning of "gods". Specifically, I think it is very strange that "Gods of XYZ" could be used as a synonym for "body politic". This indicates that the metaphysical language used comes closer to plain old "soil and grain" than an abstraction thereof. Unfortunately this ambiguity is not always understood by the political historians who deal with this issue. We're going to have to find more solid references to resolve the problem completely. Shii (tock) 18:53, 23 November 2009 (UTC)Reply

神 is usually translated as "gods"...
That's because that's what it means
but it doesn't have all the meaning of "gods".
and this is entirely mistaken.
Specifically, I think it is very strange that "Gods of XYZ" could be used as a synonym for "body politic".
1st, you're describing it having additional meanings, not fewer meanings.
2nd, this is very much just a you problem. European civilization was "Christendom" until the late modern period, the Islamic world is still the "community of believers", the Romans defended their lares and penates and the Greeks their shrines to their heroes. This is bog standard for human society outside of late modernity in the West and is less weird than fighting "for mom and apple pie".
This indicates that the metaphysical language used comes closer to plain old "soil and grain" than an abstraction thereof.
This is somewhere between entirely misinformed and orientalizing nonsense. The topic is and always has been exactly what it says on the tin. The only (somewhat) unique aspect about China's sheji is that they were part of a celestial bureaucracy and could get modifications for political reasons, like the specific identity of the grain god changing from a kid named Zhu to an ancestor of the new ruling house under the Zhou. At all points and times, though, it was still precisely polytheistic cult worship of gods for help with the harvest &c. — LlywelynII 23:40, 25 December 2022 (UTC)Reply

Sources for article expansion edit

  • Theobald, Ulrich (1 May 2018), "Sheji 社稷, the State Altars of Soil and Grain", ChinaKnowledge, Tübingen.

has fuller treatment than what we do now and so is a good place to start expanding content. If for some reason we're turning up our nose at blogs even when they're written to a high standard by the Chinese prof at Tübingen, he's got an extensive source list at the bottom that could be used in its place. — LlywelynII 23:40, 25 December 2022 (UTC)Reply