Dados Bibliográficos

AUTOR(ES) J. Xie
AFILIAÇÃO(ÕES) Lanzhou Jiaotong University, China
ANO 2018
TIPO Artigo
PERIÓDICO Critical Sociology
ISSN 0896-9205
E-ISSN 1569-1632
DOI 10.1177/0896920516654556
ADICIONADO EM 2025-08-18
MD5 a093255bb7601c9f521a9fc346d03113

Resumo

The sociologist of religion Fenggang Yang has recently extended his 'markets of religion' framework to the spiritual 'soul searching' in contemporary literature. In his epilogue to Angelica Duran and Yuhan Huang's Mo Yan in Context (2014), an anthology of interdisciplinary interpretations of Mo Yan's 'hallucinatory realist' fiction, Yang claims that 'Chinese souls' have been 'caged' by, among other things, 'Marxist-Leninist-Maoist atheism'. He refers to the Marxist theory of religion as merely 'the Marxist adage' that religion is 'the opiate of the people'. This essay analyzes Yang's 'cage' concept, to 'work against it both from without and within', as Lenin says. In doing so, I argue that Yang's 'soul searching' epilogue is a highly concentrated text of bourgeois ideological mystification and is, therefore, a productive site for Marxist oppositional pedagogy which contests the imagism of 'cages' with the materialist dialectics of class struggle.

Ferramentas