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Frontiers of History in China

ISSN 1673-3401

ISSN 1673-3525(Online)

CN 11-5740/K

Postal Subscription Code 80-980

Front. Hist. China    2019, Vol. 14 Issue (1) : 109-136    https://doi.org/10.3868/s020-008-019-0006-4
SPECIAL ISSUE ARTICLE
Healing, Entertaining, and Accumulating Merit: The Circulation of Medical Recipes from the Late Ming through the Qing
Ying Zhang()
Independent Scholar
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Abstract

This article examines the circulation of medical recipes through vernacular literature and personal networks from the late Ming through the Qing. During this period, vernacular texts played a leading role in circulating practical instructions for everyday healing techniques, especially in the form of recipes. Recipes became a versatile textual form for recording and transmitting experience in quotidian practice. They moved among different genres of texts, providing information about healing, offering advice for entertainment, and delivering moral lessons. Literati sociability as well as philanthropic and religious commitments motivated people of varied social means to distribute vernacular texts bearing healing information to a broad audience. Recipes acquired legitimacy and authority by clearly marking their provenance and thus its relationship to particular social networks and, sometimes, a religious purpose as well.

Keywords medical recipes      vernacular texts      intertextuality      philanthropic activism      accumulation of merit      circulation of quotidian information     
Issue Date: 22 April 2019
 Cite this article:   
Ying Zhang. Healing, Entertaining, and Accumulating Merit: The Circulation of Medical Recipes from the Late Ming through the Qing[J]. Front. Hist. China, 2019, 14(1): 109-136.
 URL:  
https://academic.hep.com.cn/fhc/EN/10.3868/s020-008-019-0006-4
https://academic.hep.com.cn/fhc/EN/Y2019/V14/I1/109
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