Dreaming in Premodern China

2 years ago Posted By : User Ref No: WURUR117911 0
  • Image
  • TypeCultural
  • Image
  • Location Sarasota, Florida, United States
  • Price
  • Date 20-10-2022
Dreaming in Premodern China, Sarasota, Florida, United States
Cultural Title
Dreaming in Premodern China
Event Type
Cultural
Cultural Date
20-10-2022
Location
Sarasota, Florida, United States
Organization Name / Organize By
Elling Eide Center
Organizing/Related Departments
Elling Eide Center
Organization Type
Event Organizing Company
CulturalCategory
Non Technical
CulturalLevel
All (State/Province/Region, National & International)
Related Industries
Location
Sarasota, Florida, United States

"Dreaming in Premodern China"
with Prof Rob Campany (Gertrude Conway Vanderbilt Chair in the Humanities, Professor of Asian Studies)

Thursday, October 20 at 11:00am EDT (attend in person or attend free online via ZOOM)

About The Lecture:

This lecture will provide an accessible overview of how Chinese people in ancient and medieval times thought about and responded to dreams. Touching on a wide range of texts, from anecdotes, histories, and treatises to Daoist and Buddhist scriptures, the talk will show that there wasn't just one concept of what dreams were, but several. And each concept evoked a distinct type of response. Some dreams were interpreted diagnostically as indicating latent medical or karmic problems. Some were deciphered to predict future events. Some were treated as real, face to face encounters with nocturnal visitors, from whom the dreamer might receive instruction or counsel. And some were seen as unwelcome contacts with hostile beings. Examples will be introduced to illustrate these various cultural logics at play and what difference they made in people's lives.

About The Speaker:

Robert Campany: I'm a historian of Chinese religions (particularly in the long period from 300 BCE to 800 CE) who approaches this topic with an interdisciplinary set of conceptual tools, questions, and approaches. My publications to date-six books (plus a manuscript currently under review), two co-edited volumes, and more than forty articles and chapters-have examined topics and texts spanning the Daoist, Buddhist, and Confucian traditions in China as well as popular practices. I've returned repeatedly to texts of the anecdote genre to see what we might learn from them about religious worldviews. Some of the aspects of religion explored in my research include death and the dead, notions of the afterlife and of immortality, local gods and temples, miracle tales, narratives of holy persons, the nature of interreligious interactions, ideas and practices involving Daoist and Buddhist scriptures, and intersections between religion and dietary regimens. Recently I've also investigated ancient and medieval notions of what happens when we dream, methods for interpreting dreams, and how dreams were responded to by practitioners of a wide variety of self-cultivational disciplines. One of my current projects is an investigation of the complex relationships among human and other types of selves as depicted and imagined in a wide range of texts.

EllingOEide.org

Registration Fees
Available
Registration Fees Details
Free: USD 0.00
Registration Ways
Website
Address/Venue
Elling Eide Center  8000 South Tamiami Trail  Pin/Zip Code : 34231
Contact
Elling Eide Center

[email protected]

     9418934712