Canadian Journal of History
Voi.29 No.3
Dec 1994
Pp.609-611
Copyright by Canadian Journal of History
The fundamental thesis of this book is clearly stated in its concluding chapter: Monastic patronage became significant in the late Ming because it constituted a local forum for the autonomous organization of the gentry. It provided a public arena in which the gentry could convert status into power. The choice of the monastery was to some extent guided by the ideology of charity and the idealization of withdrawal that were embodied in the Buddhist notions of compassion and non attachment. But the choice was ultimately determined by the understanding that power could not be directly seized from the imperial state. It could only be taken surreptitiously. By withdrawing to the monastic realm, the gentry publicized themselves as a unified, refined elite whose power derived not from the state but from their own conduct . . . The revalorization of public and private that underlay the publicity of patronage was integral to the formation of late-Ming gentry society, a creative response to social change . . . [The gentry] lived their lives in the middle ground between the private realm of personal and family affairs and the public authority of the county magistrate. That middle ground took shape . . . in the context of the Buddhist monastery (pp. 320-21). The focus here is on "the local gentry" defined as "the elite of late imperial China, [whose] formal status derived from performance in the state system of examinations and degree titles" (p. xiv). However, in practice, only a few graduates could hope for government appointments, so most were concerned with economic success expressed in suitably Confucian terms. Their focus and prestige were local, not national. Their power was demonstrated in part through such public works as building schools and dikes, and restoring monasteries. Although it includes valuable information about Buddhist monks and monasteries, this book "is about neither religion nor its institutions" (p. 2), but about the ways in which monasteries mere perceived and used by local gentry in the late Ming dynasty (Ming dates are 1368-1644; the period dealt with by this book is approximately 1550-1680, into the beginning of the succeeding Qing [Ch'ing] period). The book is well and gracefully written, and its thesis is amply supported with a variety of detailed case studies of particular individuals, monasteries, and counties in different parts of China. Its primary sources are approximately 170 gazetteers or local histories of counties and monasteries, supplemented by modern studies in Chinese, Japanese, and western languages. Professor Brook is aware of contemporary methodological issues, and notes the relevance of his research to current discussions of civil society, toward which, one might say, late Ming gentry society was a limited down payment. This is particularly evident in gentry formation of devotional associations and their use of monastery halls for lectures and discussions. The author also discusses changes in gentry attitudes toward Buddhism in relationship to government policy and intellectual trends, and indicates that patronage of monasteries declined in the eighteenth century due to more active official support for Confucian values. Nonetheless, it is clear that at least for the period in question, gentry involvement with Buddhism was widespread. In addition to the above, this book provides interesting discussions of the forms taken by gentry support of monasteries, including "literary patronage" by writing poems, inscriptions, and gazetteers. Some attention is also given to members of the gentry who went beyond aesthetic and cultural appreciation to become monks themselves. The one problem with Praying for Power that I found is insufficient attention to the place of its topic in the history of Chinese religions. The disclaimer quoted above does not exempt the historian from considering all relevant aspects of the topic. In fact, all the contexts are dealt with in detail except this one. Support of local religious institutions by gentry and officials goes back at least to the Song (Sung) period (960-1279), as Valerie Hansen demonstrated in her Changing Gods in Medieval China, 1127-1276 (Princeton, 1990). Kenneth Dean discusses such involvement by local leaders in the Ming and Qing in his Taoist Ritual and Popular Cults of Southeast China (Princeton, 1993), which of course came out too late for Professor Brook to consult. The deeper problem here is the ignoring of popular religion, the religious practices of the great majority of the people. This omission is clearly revealed by the general absence of reference to popular temples, and by such statements as ". . . in Dan-yang [Hubei] Buddhism dominated the religious life of the county" [p. 289). Here the author's methodological awareness falls short. Nonetheless, this is a fine and detailed study that deserves to be read by those interested in Chinese history and religion, and by comparativists studying the relationships between religion and society.