How China Got Religion

A Links entry from Thursday, October 11, 2007

6:35 PM

How China Got Religion

Slavoj Zizek writing for The New York Times on China’s new law regarding the reincarnation of living Buddhas in Tibetan Buddhism:

In short, the media image of brutal Chinese soldiers terrorizing Buddhist monks conceals a much more effective American-style socioeconomic transformation: in a decade or two, Tibetans will be reduced to the status of the Native Americans in the United States. Beijing finally learned the lesson: what is the oppressive power of secret police forces, camps and Red Guards destroying ancient monuments compared to the power of unbridled capitalism to undermine all traditional social relations?

…Perhaps we find China’s reincarnation laws so outrageous not because they are alien to our sensibility, but because they spill the secret of what we have done for so long: respectfully tolerating what we don’t take quite seriously, and trying to contain its political consequences through the law.

(Thanks to Dylan.)

6 Comments

Jason

Is everything everywhere always our fault/supposed to make us feel guilty?

Bryan Klausmeyer

I don’t think that’s the point of the article, nor would it be consistent with anything Zizek has ever written beyond what anyone would call.. uhh.. “history.”

Mark Cullen

I think we should just stand proudly, naked on a cliff’s edge and scream, “Look at us world, ha-cha!”

Alex Taylor

Bryan, you tryin to get pissed on?

Bryan Klausmeyer

I’m not into your kinky sex magick.

tina oiticica harris

Which is the largest theocracy in the world other than invasive USA in omg we trust swear on the bible we will die with god on our side. i’m on a kind of vacation. have missed you guys.how’s my stock doing?

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