Faith by Aurality in China’s Ethnic Borderland
Title Details

268 Pages

22.8 x 15.2 cm

1 map, 3 music exx. and 26 b/w illus.

Series: Eastman/Rochester Studies Ethnomusicology

Series Vol. Number: 15

Imprint: University of Rochester Press

Faith by Aurality in China’s Ethnic Borderland

Media, Mobility, and Christianity at the Margins

by Ying Diao

  • Description
  • Contents
  • Author
Illuminates how voice, faith, and hearing become intertwined with technologies of sound reproduction and mobility amid the rapidly transforming religious landscape of China's ethnic borderland.

The twentieth-century expansion of Protestantism among the upland peoples in the China-Southeast Asia borderlands has catalyzed a profound sociocultural change in the region. In Faith by Aurality in China's Ethnic Borderland, Ying Diao finds important sonic evidence for this religious revolution in a rapidly transforming northwest Yunnan, presenting a compelling account of China's minority-Christian landscape and highlighting the importance of aurality in the peripheral peoples' response to Christianity and other modernizing projects. Diao documents a range of sounded religious practices by the Lisu, an indigenous yet historically migratory people, to examine how participatory music production, circulation, and consumption become integral to indigenous perception and experience of faith.

Weaving together evidence from multisite fieldwork, archival records, and audiovisual media, Diao demonstrates nuanced understanding of people of faith at the margin, one centered on the sensual and material dimensions of religion and on the intertwining of local agency and external hegemonic forces. As the first full-length ethnographic account of China's Christian minorities on a transnational scale to be published in English, this book provides historical and contextual information that enriches anthropological, ethnomusicological, and historical scholarship on global Christianity, ethnicity, media, and mobility while showing how sound can be an ambivalent but fruitful avenue through which ways of faith are constructed and remain fluid in a context where discussions and practices of religion are constrained.
Acknowledgments
Notes on Romanization and Terminology

Introduction
1. Becoming the Faithful: Cleanliness and Conversion
2. Hearing the Return of Faith: Radio and Listening Audience
3. Producing Gospel Songs: Studio and Media Practitioners
4. Faces and Places: Sounds That Recognize
5. Traces of Faith: Sound Artifacts and Infrastructures
6. Performing Recorded Songs: Religiosity by Body
7. Hidden Faith: Sanitizing the Voice
Conclusion: Faith on the New Frontier

Appendix 1: Glossary of Old Lisu
Appendix 2: Glossary of Chinese Characters
References
Index

YING DIAO is an ethnomusicologist and cultural anthropologist with expertise in the nexus of sound, media, and religion, and in music, minorities, and transnational cultural production in the China-Southeast Asia Borderlands. She earned her Ph.D. from the University of Maryland, College Park. She is currently a SSRC Arts Research with Communities of Color Fellow.

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Title Details

268 Pages

2.28 x 1.52 cm

1 map, 3 music exx. and 26 b/w illus.

Series: Eastman/Rochester Studies Ethnomusicology

Series Vol. Number: 15

Imprint: University of Rochester Press