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March 8, 2014
Table of Contents
1 Introduction
Tong-ki

Wikipedia

 
Image:Tong2ji1.jpg
Tong-ki is a Chinese language|Chinese word (童乩 the Mandarin Chinese|Mandarin pronunciation tong2 ji1 represented in pinyin romanization is used here, in Cantonese Chinese|Cantonese, it is called San4 Daa2 神打) that refers to a person who experiences himself as having been chosen by a particular god to be his vehicle for expression here on earth.

Frequently a person who will become tong-ki experiences himself, at an early time in his life, to be coming under the compulsion of some god to be possessed by him. The person may well resist that compulsion. Should his resistance fail, he will from time to time enter into a trance in which he may beat himself with a nail-studded ball at the end of a cord and handle to the point that he draws blood from multiple wounds on his back. While in this trance state he will experience himself, and the members of his community of belief will experience him, as speaking the words of that god.

Usually the person performing this social and religious role will be called a "spirit medium" in Western languages. The phenomenon appears to have connections with shamanism and with religious Daoism (Taoism). However, a shaman is one who gains control of forces in the spirit world, whereas a tong-ki appears to be entirely under the control of forces in the spirit world.



For a great deal of additional information, see the chapter on <i>tong-ki</i>
in:

  • JORDAN, David K. 1999 Gods, ghosts, & ancestors: folk religion in a Taiwanese village. Third edition. San Diego CA: Department of Anthropology, UCSD.

  • This work has been published as a WWW document, which you may access if you will http://weber.ucsd.edu/~dkjordan click here.


This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Tong-ki".


Last Modified:   2005-04-13


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