Curriculum Vitae:
| 14 April 1981 | born in Freckenhorst (Warendorf) |
| 1991-2000 | Laurentianum (grammar school) in Warendorf |
| 2000-2009 | Studies of Sinology, General Linguistics and Political Science at the Westfälische Wilhelms-Universität (WWU) Münster; final degree: Magister Artium (German Master), title of the master's thesis: Righteous War and Punishmentin the Lushi Chunqiu |
| since November 2004 | National scholarship of the German National Academic Foundation |
| February-April 2005 | Internship as German teacher at the Goethe-Institut in Ramallah, Palestine Autonomous Areas |
| September 2005-July 2007 | Studies of the Chinese Language and Philosophy at the Sun Yat-sen University (Zhongshan daxue) in Guangzhou, People's Republic of China, as scholarship holder of the Chinese government and as full scholarship holder of the German Academic Exchange Service DAAD (until July 2006) and of the German National Academic Foundation (August 2006 until July 2007) |
| since April 2009 | Doctorate as research assistant at the graduate school of the cluster of excellence "Religion and Politics in Pre-Modern and Modern Cultures" at the WWU Münster |
Ph.D. Project
Civil Religion, Tradition and Orthodoxy during the Huichang Era (841–846): A Study in Li Deyu’s ‘Critiques’ (lun)
China is often and quite willingly considered to be ‘avant la lettre secular’ (J. Casanova). But how did the relationship between religion and politics look like in historical actuality, for instance during the golden age of Buddhism under the Tang (or T’ang) Dynasty (618–907)? Was there something along the lines of a secular, Ruist (or Confucian) orthodoxy, orthopraxy, or ‘civil religion’ (H. Seiwert), which was opposed to the Religious in the shape of ‘Isms’ as Buddhism and Daoism (or Taoism), fangshi (‘recipe gentleman’, D. Harper), and popular or ‘diffuse’ religion (C.K. Yang), comprised of ancestor worship, divination, etc.?
My thesis focuses on the period between the proscription of Buddhism (and other religions that were considered ‘foreign‘) under Emperor Wuzong (r. 840–846) and its subsequent restitution under Xuanzong (r. 846–859). My corpus comprises 48 ‘essays’ or ‘critiques’ (lun), written by chancellor Li Deyu (787–ca. 850) and preserved in his late work Qiong chou zhi (Records of Exhaustion and Grief). These critiques deal with fangshi, Totenfolge in Ancient China, the convert-cum-emperor Liang Wudi (r. 502–549), etc. Furthermore, Li addressed memorials to the emperor, in which he remonstrates against the appointment of Daoists to the court and private ordinations of Buddhist monks and nuns, ponders about the function and structure of the imperial ancestral temple – and occasionally congratulates his emperor on the destruction of monasteries. Moreover, he probably authored an edict dating from 845 that marked the climax and completion of Emperor Wuzong’s proscription.
Intriguing from the perspective of comparative literature and cultural studies is Li’s usage of quotations from canonical, historiographical and other sources as Zuozhuan (Tradition of Zuo, – a canonical ‘commentary‘ on the Spring and Autumn Annals) and Hanshu (Book of Han – a canonical history of the Former or Western Han Dynasty, 202 BC – 9 AD), which he employs to build chains of arguments. Almost none of his works has been translated into a modern language yet.
On the theoretical side I contend that there was no independent religious field in Imperial China at least since the Eastern Han Dynasty (9–220 AD). Instead, there existed multiple religious fields (of Buddhism, Daoism, fangshi, ect.), but only one ‘literary-political’ field (i.e., circumscribed by the written language), which evolved in a normative triangle between the emperor(s), the classical literature and the scholar-officials (and aspirants to this position).
The indubitably existing Religious incessantly infiltrated the literary-political field during the course of history, but it was either integrated into the literary-political field or excluded from the scene. Violence between scholar officials, who were educated in the Ruist canon, on one side and Buddhist and Daoist clerics as well as fangshi on the other can better be explained as processes of social closure in the literary-political field rather than as ‘competition over the distribution of religious commodities (Heilsgüter)’ in the sense of P. Bourdieu.
Function within the cluster/Membership in projects and groups:
- Coordination of the study group Emic and etic perspectives on Religion and Politics
- Member of the study group Charting the Boundaries of the Religious Field
- Member of the study group Civil Religion
- Deputy mid-level faculty member of the Board of Directors of the Cluster of Excellence and of the Assembly of Principal Investigators
- Deputy doctoral student representative in the Board of Directors of the Graduate School
Research Interests:
- Philology of Classical Chinese
- Intellectual history of China
- Religions of China, Chinese religious politics
- Elite formation and conflicts between elites in China
Teaching Experience (in German):
- Winter semester 2008-2009: "Righteous weapons“ in the Lüshi Chunqiu
- Summer semester 2009: Classical Chinese II
- Winter semester 2010-2011: Religion, Staat und Orthodoxie im vormodernen China
Publications:
- (in German) „Anti-Clericalism and Rhetoric of Exclusion in Tang Times: Religious Politics in the Thought of Li Deyu“. In: Bochumer Jahrbuch für Ostasienwissenschaften 34 (2010), forthcoming.
- (in German) „Righteous Weapons and the Art of Punishment“. In: Monumenta Serica 53 (2010), forthcoming.
Conference contributions:
- December 16, 2009 (in German): “Li Deyu and His Role During the Huichang Proscription of Buddhism (841–846)”. Mittagsforum der Fakultät für Ostasienwissenschaften an der Ruhr-Universität Bochum.
- February 13, 2010 (in German): “’Felicitations on the Destruction of Monasteries‘ or: How to Congratulate an Emperor”. Annual meeting of the Association of Young China Scholars (China AG) at the Humboldt University in Berlin.
- April 20 2010 (in German): “Officials, Clerics, and Alchemists: Religious Practitioners and Political Rulers in Medieval China”. Open Day of the graduate school at the Cluster of Excellence ‘Religion and Politics’ in Muenster.
- July 16, 2010: „Exclusion and Role Performance: Policies and Polemics against Religious Personnel during the Tang Dynasty”. Biannual Conference of the European Association of Chinese Studies (EACS) in Riga.
- November 26, 2010 (in German): „Of Ministers and Rulers: Variations of a Motif in Li Deyu’s ‘Judgments about History’”. Annual Meeting of the German Association of China Studies (DVCS) in Heidelberg.
- Dezember 2, 2010: „Striving for Orthodoxy: Li Deyu’s (787-850) Stance Toward Religion”. Workshop “Ritual and Scripture in the Formation of State and Religion” at the Institut of Sinology and East Asian Studies in Münster.
Contact
Michael Höckelmann M. A.Institute of Sinology and East Asian Studies
Schlaunstraße 2
Room 426, DG2
D-48143 Münster
Germany
Tel.: +49 251 83-29835
mich.hoec@uni-muenster.de
Supervisor
Prof. Dr. Reinhard EmmerichInstitute of Sinology and East Asian Studies
Schlaunstraße 2
Room 15
D-48143 Münster
Germany
Tel.: +49 251 83-29903
Fax: +49 251 83-29827
emmerir@uni-muenster.de
Supervisor
Prof. Dr. Helwig Schmidt-GlintzerHerzog August Bibliothek Wolfenbüttel
Lessingplatz 1
D-38304 Wolfenbüttel
Germany
Tel.: +49 5331 808-101
Fax: +49 5331 808-134
schmidt-gl@hab.de

