Table, Maps, and Figures
Preface
Introduction: Religion and Vernacular Fiction in China
Daoji the Man
Daoji the Man
Madness and Power in Chinese Buddhism
Crazy Ji the Fictional Character
Monk and Magician
Clown and Moral Exemplar
Martial Artist and Champion of the Poor
Jigong the God
From Spirit-Possession to Monastic Appropriation
Conclusion: The God's Laughter
Appendixes
Extant Written, and Transcribed Oral, Fiction on Jigong
The Thirty-eight Sequels to the Storyteller's Jigong
Extant Pre-Twentieth-Century Plays on Jigong
Literature on, and by, Jigong Distributed in Taiwanese Temples
Reference Matter
Abbreviations
Notes
Works Cited
Glossary
Index
Table, Maps, and Figures
Table
Some Deities and Some of the Novels in Which They Figure
Maps
Hangzhou sites associated with Daoji's life and his later cult
Location of nineteenth-century Beijing stores that rented out Jigong Drum-Song manuscripts
Figures
Jigong; woodblock print in the 1569 edition of the Recorded Sayings
The Jingci Monastery's well
Vendor's seals on the Jigong Drum-Song manuscript in the Chewang Fu collection
Shop's seal and reader's scribbles on the Jigong Drum-Song manuscript in the Academia Sinica collection
Jigong's statue at the Five-Hundred
The "Mad Monk" of the Yue Fei saga. Statue, dated igog, at the Five-Hundred
Jigong in a puppet television serial
Lin Guoxiong as Jigong in a 1980s television serial produced by Yashi Television, Hong Kong
Chen Shengzai as Jigong in a Minghuayuan gezaixi-opera performance, Gaoxiong, Taiwan, August 1989
The spirit-medium Chen Wenshan, in a trance, as Jigong; Pingdong county, southern Taiwan, 198o
An advertisement for a Jigong gambling shrine distributed to pilgrims during the Goddess Mazu's birthday festival, Beigang, Taiwan, April 1987
A Jigong medium in a trance writing numbers for Everybody's Happy bettors, Pingdong County, Taiwan, June 1987
Spirit-writing seance at the Taipei offices of the Association of the Orthodox Religion's Writing and Painting, April 1987
Spirit-writing seance at the Taipei offices of the Association of the Orthodox Religion's Writing and Painting, April 1987
A self-portrait of the god Jigong produced by the automatic spirit-painting technique, at the Taipei offices of the Association of the Orthodox Religion's Writing and Painting
A statue of Jigong in the Five Dragons Mountain-Phoenix Mountain Temple in Gaoxiong County, Taiwan
Jigong's image in the 1987 comic-strip book Jigong gushi (Jigong stories)
Jigong in an early twentieth-century lithographic edition of the Drunken Puti, by the Shanghai publisher Chenhe ji shu
Jigong in an early twentieth-century lithographic edition of the Storyteller's Jigong, by the Shanghai publisher Chenhe ji shu
Jigong's fan in the comic-strip book Jigong gushi (Jigong stories)
· · · · · · (
收起)