Summary: | The door plays an important part in religious rituals and beliefs throughout
many cultures and thus is often considered to be the residence of some spirit or is
appointed a special protective deity. In China, door gods are called menshen and are
associated with the lunar New Year celebration. They are pictures of mythological
or deified historical figures placed on double-leaf gates or single-leaf doors to guard
against evil influences. Sometimes, door prints depict mythological beasts, tigers,
roosters, or exorcistic symbols, all of which are believed to provide protection from
evil. There are also auspicious door prints which express the desire to attain wealth
and prosperity, to give birth to a son, or to pass the civil service examination.
Past studies of door gods have primarily focused on their artistic evolution and
characteristics in the form of Chinese woodblock New Year prints. This study
focuses on the role of door gods as deities in Chinese popular religion, ritual, and
the New Year festival celebration concentrating primarily on literary evidence
instead of artistic. It shows that door gods are not just printed images, but possess
'personality' and 'emotion'. I provide annotated translations or summaries of
relevant short stories, tales, poems, popular novels, and dramas in which door gods
play a role. I also briefly discuss the current use of door gods in the People's
Republic of China based on the fieldwork and observations of myself and various
scholars.
The major conclusions reached in the thesis are: (1) there is no direct evidence
supporting the belief that modern-day door gods evolved directly from or
supplanted the five tutelary deities of first century BCE China; (2) Qin Qiong (?-638)
and Yuchi Jingde (585-658) did not supplant the mythological door guardians Shen
Tu and Yu Lei; (3) there is evidence to support the belief that door gods did receive
sacrificial offerings; and, (4) only through the combination of literary and artistic
evidence will the history and evolution of this deity be fully understood by future
scholars. === Arts, Faculty of === Asian Studies, Department of === Graduate
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