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ters are melting in the sun; these are the traces left by the water calligrapher,
who has already been and gone. 1 A few paces in, in the shade of a garden
pavilion (ting 停), an elderly couple vigorously rub their ear lobes to awaken
the qi (氣) vital energy. All along the winding path and spreading around its
central pond, several other park users – by themselves, with their teachers or
in groups – practise all forms of wushu (武術), martial arts.2 Some stand around
a tape recorder as the voice calls out the moves, others await instruction from
their masters who are practising in front of them. Some remain standing still,
opening their hands to the sky or placing them on a point below the navel
known as dantian (丹田 or “elixir field”), regarded as the root of the body’s qi.3
Not far from Jing’an Temple, another one of the city’s downtown parks
awakens to its daily practices. At Fuxing Park, a verdant enclave located in
the former French Concession, early morning wushu practitioners are accompanied by a host of pet owners who lovingly bring their birds out for an airing. They hang their cages on a cluster of branches, while they gather below
for a chat and listen to the birds’ songs. Later on, choir members assemble to
belt out old propaganda songs from their youth; musicians hide in the bushes
to practise their scales; dancers congregate at both dawn and dusk to tap,
swing and waltz amongst the trees. The afternoon brings kite-fliers, card-players and tea-drinkers, as well as the old men who skilfully manipulate diabolos,
swinging them back and forth, catching them in the air and circling them
around their bodies like a hula hoop.4
While these activities may look like mere forms of entertainment taking
place in a global secular city, we want to suggest, instead, that they be treated
as the everyday ritual practices of an enchanted modernity. In Maoist China,
the political rituals of mass mobilisation went a long way toward suppressing
and replacing religious rituals.5 In recent years, however, there has been a
strong growth of religious practices concerned with individual lives, hopes
and wishes, and a growing interest in nature and the environment. In cities,
there is a great and varied religious life. Religious traditions and new religions
have also become the focus of cultural, tourism and heritage projects.6 Taken
together, this contemporary religious renewal suggests that, alongside the top1 On water calligraphy see Zito 2014.
2 On the genealogy of the Chinese martial arts see Shahar 2008.
3 The representation of the Chinese body has been the subject of many studies. Angela Zito, Tani Barlow,
Judith Farquhar, Eva Kit Wah Man and Ari Larissa Heinrich, in particular, have focused on several distinct
aspects, namely, aesthetics, ethics, politics, sexuality, genre, biopolitics. On the birth of modern qigong, see
for example Kohn 2002, Penny 1993 and Palmer 2007. On the institutionalisation of Chinese medicine see
Croizier 1968. For the meaning of these terms and related practices see Yokota 2014. For Daoist-inspired
practices in modern China see Liu 2004.
4 These brief descriptions are based on the authors’ ethnographic notes taken during several visits to the
parks in downtown Shanghai during winter and spring of 2018.
5 For a sociological account of the Red Guard Movement, see Walder 2009.
6 For recent changes in the religious landscape of China see for example Chau 2005 and Tarocco 2019.
Urban Cultivation in Shanghai
down planning and engineering of the modern metropolis, there are growing
processes of re-enchantment, in which the traditions of cultivation play an
important part.
Figure 1: Wushu practitioners in Jing’an Park (Anna Greenspan, 2016)
In this paper, which focuses particularly on the Shanghai region in China, we
explore the continued relevance of notions and practices of self-cultivation in
the urban Sinosphere and suggest that they might be of value in the imagination of a future ecological metropolis. We articulate the concepts and practices of urban cultivation by focusing on three main areas. First, we examine
self-cultivation concretely, as a set of situated embodied practices in specific
places and specific historical conditions. We examine the embodied practices
of self-cultivation as understood in Daoist and medical traditions that are still
influential today. By treating the body as a site composed by the flow and
blockages of qi, Daoist inner alchemists cultivate a microcosmic attunement
to the constitutive force within Chinese cosmology. Second, we look at selfcultivation in the context of the writings of the influential philosopher Mou
Zongsan (牟宗三, 1909–1995). As did other leading Chinese intellectuals at
the turn of the twentieth century, Mou sought to place historical Chinese cultural forms within the discourse of modernity rather than attribute the rise in
the world of “modern” forms to Western powers alone. In contrast to the
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Chinese discourse of modernisation embraced by the culture of the May Fourth
Movement, Mou viewed the ethics of cultivation as a critical contribution to
modern times. Third, we explore some physical spaces of cultivation, namely
the gardens of the Jiangnan region (江 南, lit. “south of the river”). Jiangnan
extends from the large metropolitan areas of Shanghai and Nanjing to the
older urban centres of Suzhou, Hangzhou, Wuxi and Ningbo, all of which
abound with urban gardens. The cultivation of the garden – its landscaped
spaces, trees, rocks, waterways and pavilions – complicates the notion that
nature in its ideal state is wild, unspoilt and opposed to cultural construction.
Rather, in viewing nature (including human nature) as improved or enhanced
by cultivation, the ethic embodied in the gardens of Southern China offers
new ways of imagining the nature of cities. In the end, we turn from the urban
gardens of Jiangnan to consider the modern urban park, focusing in particular
on Shanghai’s most central park in Jing’an district. While it is generally regarded as a public area shaped by the forces of secular modernity, the everyday
rituals in Jing’an Park can also be seen as a form of religious re-enchantment
attuned to Buddhist soteriologies and spaces of cultivation. The reanimation
of the “buddhascapes” of modern Shanghai, we conclude, opens up new ways
of conceptualising Chinese modernity and its approach to urban nature.
Our paper stems out of a larger research project, which questions the progressive temporal underpinnings of modernity in China. It excavates an alternative undercurrent, which challenges the divide between humans and nonhumans, nature and culture. Navigating between these dichotomies, it diffuses
rigid categories into a “natureculture” (Haraway 2003) that is bound together
in a web of reciprocal influence.7 In order to do this, we engage from a philosophical, aesthetic and historical perspective with notions of self-cultivation
and the disciplines of the “cultivation of life” (yangsheng 養生). We look at
self-cultivation as a conceptual ideal and as a set of situated embodied cultural
practices, which have been enabled by specific places and specific historical
conditions and which are now harnessed in urban daily life. Yangsheng, a rich
and multifaceted tradition, is alive and well in the everyday life of contempor
ary Chinese cities (see also Zito 2014 and Farquhar 2005). Our project examines the work of cultivation in several case studies that envision the nature of
the future metropolis. We will look at urban farming and architecture; in particular the new urbanism project “Edible Cities”. We will also analyse artistic
practices that engage with self-cultivation, including those of Hong Lei 洪磊
and Zheng Bo 鄭波.8 Hong Lei revisits the aesthetics of garden stones in his
haunting black-and-white photographs Taihu Stones (太湖石, 2006). Zheng,
meanwhile, inspired by the Neoconfucian thinker Wang Yangming and his
7 Our views on cultural conceptions of nature have been especially influenced by Nash 2014 and Elvin 2010.
8 For Zheng Bo’s practices see http://zhengbo.org/index.html; for Hong Lei see http://www.chambersfineart.com/artists/hong-lei/cv?view=slider#13 (accessed June 2019).
Urban Cultivation in Shanghai
practice of gewu zhizhi (格物致知, literally “to obtain knowledge by investigating the nature of things”), makes art that involves living with and learning
from plants. Crucially, in his continuing engagement with Shanghai, Zheng’s
projects have been particularly focused on weeds. Perhaps, he provocatively
suggests, it is the non-cultivated that can guide us towards the novel urban
“gardens” of today.
Figure 2: The artist Zheng Bo (by courtesy of Zheng Bo, 2018)
2. Shanghai
With a population of more than 25 million, Shanghai is one of the largest municipalities in the world. It is also at the forefront of the most intense process
of urbanisation in history.9 The city’s ongoing monumental transformation –
the construction of almost twenty new subway lines, dozens of museums, skyscrapers, bridges and roads – is occurring in conjunction with an increasing
mobilisation around environmental concerns. Alarming levels of air pollution,
recurrent stories of toxic food and water, and predictions of serious flooding
have all ensured that questions of a sustainable urban ecology have become
9 For a recent survey of Shanghai as a global city see Wasserstrom 2012, and the monumental multivolume history of Shanghai (Shanghai Tongshi 1999).
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paramount in the construction of China’s new cities. In the past two decades,
Shanghai has sought to address these concerns by building a vast public transport system and embarking on a series of ambitious projects to clean the water
ways. In keeping with its status as “National Garden City”, it has continued
to expand its green spaces. The Shanghai Master Plan (2017–2035) has outlined strategies for a “sponge city”, to mitigate the impact of climate change.10
Much of the discourse surrounding these modernising projects still appears to
draw upon models of environmentalism based on the conception of an externalised nature. This is manifest both in the presupposition that nature can be
managed and controlled by planning and infrastructure and, alternatively, in
the myth of an untrammelled nature that exists in opposition to the culture of
modern urban life.
It would be a mistake to think that these ecological assumptions can simply
be explained away as problematic Western imports. The idea of nature as an
object of cultural control is also found in the philosophies and ecologies of the
Chinese world. Ruthless human interventions are part of the Chinese historical record as much as they are part of the European one. According to Mark
Elvin, a certain amount of environmental degradation already took place between the tenth and fourteenth century in the context of remarkable advancement in agricultural productivity, urbanisation and mechanisation. The destruction of forests, soils and wildlife habitats reached its nadir during the
population explosion of the late-imperial period, especially in the most technically advanced regions of the country (Elvin 2004: 6–7). Here, then, we are
not postulating that certain specific Chinese ideas and perceptions of the
natural environment can be considered a critical factor in explaining how the
Chinese have actually used the resources of nature. Recognising these historical complexities, our project does not naively advocate for a return to a
romanticised past.
Robert Weller confirms this scepticism towards an inherent ahistorical ecological sensitivity. He notes that both the People’s Republic of China and
Taiwan in the post-war period echoed Japan under the Meiji restoration of the
late 19th century in that they adhered strictly to a purely utilitarian approach
to the natural environment in the name of economic progress. They were indifferent to the destruction of nature by the process of industrialisation. A hallmark of the Meiji regime, this attitude also characterised both the nationalist
and communist governments of China throughout the twentieth century. The
slogans Maoists used to promote large-scale highly invasive infrastructure,
including giant dams, best encapsulate this mentality: “Man Must Conquer
Nature” and “Battling with Nature is Boundless Joy”. Policy makers did not
10 See planning documents provided by the Shanghai Municipal People’s Government, Shanghai Scientific
and Technical Publishers, 2017. For a study on how the imagination of Shanghai contributes to reshaping
our collective human futures see Greenspan 2014.
Urban Cultivation in Shanghai
show any signs of an environmental consciousness or sensitivity to the fundamental importance of nature, Weller argues, before the middle of the 1980s. It
is only then that China and Taiwan witness the creation of national parks and
the rise of so-called “nature tourism”.11
3. Embodied practices
Nevertheless, embodied practice survives. In imperial times, salvation, transcendence, longevity and the creation of an immortal body were for centuries
key to practices and discourses of self-cultivation (xiulian 修煉, but also
xiuxing 修行 or “individual cultivation”). The term xiushen 修身 refers specifically to cultivating the body in the sense of cultivating one’s entire person. In
Daoist inner alchemy, “nature”, as it extends to the body, is the primary subject of cultivation (Pregadio 2005, Yokota 2014). In his book The Expressiveness of the Body and the Divergence of Greek and Chinese Medicine (2002),
Shigehisa Kuriyama brings to our attention two images of the human body,
one taken by the medical text Routes of the Fourteen Meridians and their
Functions (Shisijing fahui 十四經發揮, 1341) by Hua Shou 滑壽, a Chinese
physician, and the second taken by Vesalius’s12 Fabrica (1543). The striking
distinction between a body marked by muscular structure versus one governed
by the points of acupuncture that trace the flow of qi vividly demonstrates the
difference in the perception of the human body between these two medical
practices and their attending cosmologies.
Throughout his book, Kuriyama eloquently shows that one of the main
reasons for this difference was that, in their understanding of the human body,
Western physicians typically used a zoological model, where Chinese doctors
looked instead to the world of plants. “Greek anatomy, we know, revolved
around animals: not only were they the victim of most dissections, but the
very idea of dissection owed much to curiosity about their organizing logic. A
major inspiration for inquiry into musculature, moreover, was the desire to
illuminate the secrets of animation, to clarify the wonderful capacity for self
movement which made animals, including human animals, distinct from
plants” (Kuriyama 2002: 191). The Chinese science of the body, on the other
hand, is rooted in an agricultural system that “has always been lopsided in
favor of grain production, with animal husbandry playing a subsidiary role”
(ibid.: 187). The world of vegetation rather than nonhuman animals was the
preferred model for an understanding of embodiment. This vegetative per11 See Weller 2004: 2–12, 49–53, 64–101. On Japan see Morris-Suzuki 1991.
12 Andreas van Wessel, or Vesalius, was a Flemish anatomist and author of the famous text De humani
corporis fabrica (On the Fabric of the Human Body).
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spective offers a more diffuse and porous conception of corporeality, one
which is not based on the rigid distinctions between organs and body parts.
The genius of plants, as biologist Stefano Mancuso has written, offers a model
of sensitivities and intelligence that is flat and distributed, rather than specialised and centralised (Mancuso 2017). Chinese religious practitioners had a
practical orientation to their embodiment, engaging with a variety of techniques in their search for individual salvation, health and longevity. By the
tenth century, their practices included meditation practices, breathing methods, ingestion of herbal and other drugs, a large variety of ritual or divinatory
practices, as well as the sets of gymnastics and bodily postures known as
daoyin (導引). Among these methods, we also find the breathing practices and
alchemy known in the Daoist tradition as waidan (外丹 external alchemy, lit.
“external elixir”) and neidan 內丹 (internal alchemy, lit. “internal elixir”).
After the Song period (960–1279), Neidan became influential outside Daoism,
and in the late-imperial period, it was integrated into various aspects of Chinese culture.13
Both medical and Daoist texts keenly explore the basic constituents of the
macrocosm and the microcosm. All natural phenomena are seen as a reverberation of qi, the underlying constitutive force within Chinese cosmology. Qi is
at the centre of Chinese cosmologies and epistemologies of the body and its
natural surroundings from the very beginning, and in a systematic way since
the third century BCE. The body is understood as a physiological entity made
up of the triad qi, shen (神, a manifestation of the “spirits”) and jing (精,
“essences”, which may also refer to the refined qi). Other key terms include
the dynamics of yin (陰) and yang (陽) and the theory of the “five phases” (wu
xing 五行, namely water, fire, metal, wood and earth). Dao (道, lit. “way”)
and li (理 or “pattern, principle”) are two other key concepts. This system, in
its several historical variants and reconfigurations, combines both material
and metaphysical concerns. It compounds ideas on the body (ti 體), the “heartmind” (xin 心), and the realm in which human beings exist (Pregadio 2005,
Yokota 2014, Elvin 2010). The term used today as an equivalent of the English word “nature” is the older term ziran (自然;“that which is so of itself”).
Importantly, nature is treated as humans’ greater self. Historically, tombs,
temples and cities were sited in relation to waters and mountains and according to the position of the sun. These geomantic practices (fengshui 風水) were
systematised and aligned with official cosmology. Xun Liu argues in his Daoist Modern, a study of the already metropolitan city of Shanghai during the
Republican era (1912–1949), that the Daoist inner alchemy revival movement
actively participated in China’s path of modernisation. Practitioners infused
cultivation toward immortality with issues pertinent to their identity as Chi13 For Daoist ideas and practices of internal alchemy see Yokota 2014 and Pregadio 2005. For Chinese
medicine see Hsu 2008; for Daoism in modern China see Liu 2009 and Chen 1995.
Urban Cultivation in Shanghai
nese urban elites of their time. Thanks to their efforts, Daoist cultivation
methods continue to be of relevance for the rest of the Chinese society (Liu
2009).
4. Alternative modernities
In the early twentieth century, the merits of cultivation were spread not only
through embodied practices but also through philosophical discourse. Mou
Zongsan’s Buddhist-inspired New Confucianism sees conceptions of cultivation as a critical contribution to the modern thought of Immanuel Kant. His
writings contain one of the most conceptually rich articulations of the concept
of self-cultivation in modern times. Mou roots his ideas in a Chinese philosophical lineage – which he himself constructs – that maintains that access to
the world beyond appearances, to “things as they are in themselves” is possible through practice. He elaborates this philosophical project through an
engagement with transcendental philosophy. Mou translated all three of
Kant’s critiques, an enormously complex exercise that drove him to think
through and borrow from Confucian, Daoist and, most of all, Buddhist doctrine and terminology. His response to Kant, whom he placed at the “climax
of Western philosophy” (Billioud 2012: 9) was to posit a conception of human
reason that went beyond transcendental limits and opened up to an exterior
plane. Crucially, this access to a realm outside the boundaries of the subject
occurred not through faith, as it did for Kant, but instead, through embodied
practice. “The nexus of Mou Zongsan’s philosophy,” contends Sebastien
Billioud “is the affirmation of a possible practical knowledge of the noumenal
world. [… In] his vertical philosophical system,” he explains, “the underlying
ideal is the possibility of becoming a sage (in Confucianism), a Buddha (in
Buddhism), or a divine being (in Daoism). Such an ideal is attainable by everyone through practice” (Billioud 2012: 56).
Confucian moral cultivation (xiuyang 修養) is practice; Daoist cultivation (xiulian 修
煉) is practice; Buddhist precept, concentration, and wisdom (jie ding hui 戒定慧) is
practice […] Confucianism, Daoism and Buddhism […] affirm practice as a way of becoming divine (chengshen 成神). (Mou 2014: 77)
Mou maintains that practical reason lies in the domain of morality. “China’s
Confucianism, Daoism, and Buddhism,” he writes “all emphasize moving
through practice to reach the highest good” (Mou 2014: 94). For him, morality is not determined as a universal law. Instead, it is best understood as an
ethic or even an aesthetic. Practice culminates in the ideal of cultivation. “The
cornerstone of Mou’s moral metaphysics (which – let us repeat – is a practical
and moral approach of the universe’s ultimate reality),” concurs Billioud, “is
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gongfu” (or the practice of self-cultivation) (Billioud 2012: 197). Like Michel
Foucault’s notion of the “art of life”, 14 a philosophy of cultivation views
thought not merely as a means of understanding the world, but as instead offering guidance on “a way to live”. Cultivation does not promise theoretical
knowledge. It does not represent the world. As a form of practical rather than
cognitive knowledge, “gongfu focuses on ‘life’ 生命 (i.e. self-cultivation and
self-transformation) rather than on ‘nature’ 自然 (i.e. knowledge of the world)”
(Billioud 2012: 10). Mou calls this shengming de xuewen 生命的學問 or “existential learning”, explains Clower, and contends that its fundamental concern is “how to regulate our lives, conduct our lives, and settle our lives”
(Clower 2014: 9).
Mou Zongsan’s new Confucianism was an important part of the countercurrent to the radical progressivism that has tended to dominate the intellectual life of modern China (Furth 1976, Makeham 2003). Yet, calling upon the
philosophy of cultivation was in no way meant as an attempt to flee from the
modern world. Rather, in the Chinese ideal of practice, and from the vantage
point of the luxuriant urban parks of the Chinese University of Hong Kong,
Mou saw the possibilities of regenerating and reworking traditions that might
usher in an alternative modernity.
5. From gardens to city parks: urban garden as practice
Practices of cultivation are rooted in, and inspired by, particular locales. In
urban settings the primary site is the garden. Gardens have been cultivated as
places of practice from at least as early as the late Ming period. Literati life
centred on the garden as the locus of self-cultivation; a place that was particularly conducive to elite sociality, composing and reading poetry, playing and
listening to music, drinking tea and entertaining friends. In his book The Chinese Garden, Joseph Wang quotes at length from the Qing scholar Chen Haozi
陈淏子 (born around 1612/1615) whose text Huajing (花鏡 or “Mirror of
Flowers”) records in exquisite detail daily life as it unfolds in each of the
garden’s different seasons. Wang calls it an “autobiography of a leisurely life”.
Here is Chen’s account of a typical summer’s day:
Summer
As soon as I got up early in the morning, I put on a lotus-leaf quilt as clothing and
breathed the moist fresh air of the blossoming trees, at the same time singing and reciting verses of poetry as a way to teach the parrot to speak. During late morning, I casually
read parts of Laozi and Zhuangzi, or practiced brush strokes patterned after famous
calligraphers in the past. At noon, I took off my headscarf, hung it up over a cliff, and
14 See Foucault 1997 and Davidson 1994.
Urban Cultivation in Shanghai
then sat around a bamboo couch with close friends to discuss the scholarly work of
Qixie and Shanhai jing. When tired, I took a nap and enjoyed a good dream. Thereafter,
we had coconut and other fruit as snack and lotus flower wine as beverage. After taking
a bath in the evening, I went boating and fishing amongst the wine-lined winding rivulet.
(Chen Haozi in Wang 1998: 24)
This sense of a cultivated life within the garden structures all aspects of the
physical landscape and guides the conception of nature that the garden is
meant to evoke. In the introduction to her book The Chinese Garden, Maggie
Keswick writes about radically differing cultural attitudes to lawns. In the
West, she argues, the lawn functions as a “formalized representation of grassy
meadows” that has behind it “the weight of the whole pastoral tradition”
(Keswick 2003: 28). For Chinese rice growers, on the other hand, pastureland
can only suggest the nomadic cattle raiser, the uncultivated barbarian. She
tells of an educated Chinese gentleman visiting Europe in the 1920s who commented in amazement on a “mown and bordered lawn, which, while no doubt
of interest to a cow, offers nothing to the intellect of a human being” (Keswick
2003: 28). The making of a garden can be seen as a form of practice that is
based on the principle that nature is improved and enhanced by cultivation.
Chinese gardens celebrate the mutual involvement of nature and culture, with
bridges crossing streams, pagodas emerging from bamboo thickets and calligraphy decorating ornamental stones. The human element is integral to the
garden, which is made for its visitors and organised in terms of the paths that
traverse it. “The English,” writes Keswick, “‘plant’ a garden, the Chinese ‘build’
one.”15
The ideal of self-cultivation that is rooted in the construction of a garden
is, as Joseph Wang notes, recorded in a variety of texts that outline the prin
ciples for the garden practitioner. Shen Fu (沈復 1708–1808) writes of the “art
of deception” in garden design in his Fusheng Liuji (浮生六級 “Six Chapters
of a Floating Life”), in the chapter entitled “The Little Pleasures of Life”.
Early 17th-century Qi Biaojia likens his practice as a gardener to a physician,
general and painter rolled into one. He advises adding to space when it seems
too empty, subtracting when it seems too full, levelling it when it seems too
uneven, creating bends and unevenness when it seems too flat. “It is like a
good doctor in the field curing a patient, using both nourishing and excitative
medicines, or like a good general in the field, using both normal and surprise
tactics,” he writes. “Again, it is like a master painter at his work, not allowing
a single dead stroke” (Qi Biaojia in Wang 1994: 35).
In the garden, culture and nature are seen as “naturally” interwoven. Archi
tecture in the shape of the pavilion (ting), which serves to frame and focus
15 Keswick’s cultural opposition is perhaps too facile. One might argue that there are plenty of “built
gardens” in the European context. Nevertheless, the contrast between a garden based on a romantic ideal
of an untrammelled nature that is reproduced in an urban setting versus the cultivated aesthetic of the
Jiangnan garden is a powerful one.
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nature, as well as offer a shelter and resting place, is an essential part of garden design. In the classical gardens of the Jiangnan region, pavilions dot the
landscape – they are designed and placed so as to maximise meditation on a
site that is particularly admired: a lake, the moon, the mountains. Keswick
quotes the saying: “Once a place has a ting we can say we have a garden”
(Keswick 2003: 132). Gardens are given a name and the most valued spaces
are typically marked by calligraphic written interventions. “For the scholargardener, his most cherished goal was to be able to use his creation as a vehicle
to embody and convey to beholders a specific set of shi qing hua yi (詩情畫意,
literally “poetic sentiments and artistic conceptions”, Wang 1994: 45). This
sense of gardens as both an inspiration and a site for artistic creation appears
also in the intimate relationship between gardens and landscape paintings. As
a practice of self-cultivation, leisurely enjoyment of culture amongst the rocks,
trees and plants is itself a highest good. Thus, the urban “gardenscapes” reveal the specific relation between urban nature and cultivation of Jiangnan
cities, from Suzhou to Shanghai.
In the contemporary city, leisurely enjoyment of urban green space has largely
shifted from private gardens to public parks. For those outside the scholar
elites, this transition has resulted in greater access to urban nature. This transformation, however, has also occurred in conjunction with an ideology of secularisation. In his essay, “From Imperial Gardens to Public Parks: The Transformation of Urban Space in Early Twentieth-Century Beijing”, Mingzheng
Shi traces the genealogy of the public park in China. He shows how the creation
of public spaces was part of a secularising dynamic through which older religious sites were appropriated in the creation of the modern city. “The concept
of the public park, where common people can go for relaxation and recreation,” he writes, “is purely Western and modern” (Shi 1998: 225). The early
twentieth century public park movement drew on modern secular notions of
leisure and entertainment to construct the notion of a park as an area “set
aside for recreation, education, or for the preservation and enjoyment of
natural beauty” (ibid.: 225). The Republican government embraced parks as
a strategy of modernisation. “Since public parks were something modern
cities had,” he writes, “China should also have them” (Shi 1998: 232).
During the Qing Dynasty, Beijing had a number of imperial gardens, but all
were reserved for the ruling Manchu class. The inner city spaces open to visitors
were situated around temples. These were popular during regularly held temple
fairs that bustled with markets, amusements and entertainment. The transformation of the sacred spaces devoted to city gods and ancestral and local deities
into the modern gongyuan (公园) was “filtered through Meiji Japan, which
incorporated it from the West for town and city planning” (Shi 1998: 226)
Evidence of this lineage is written into the language. Although the Chinese
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term gongyuan had existed in the classical Chinese lexicon, it actually referred
to official gardens or land owned by the government – something altogether
quite different from the Western notion of the park as a public space. In Meiji
Japan, however, the character compound gongyuan was borrowed by the Japanese to translate the modern European term “public park”, implying public
access and even public ownership and was subsequently re-introduced into the
modern Chinese lexicon. By incorporating gongyuan into the city space, the
modernising government, argues Shi, was attempting to create a new sense of
urban identity and promote “people’s health and ethics” in order to “reform
the lifestyles of urban residents” (ibid.: 232).16
6. Disenchantment?
This transformation of the city’s green spaces is motivated by a cluster of
ideas linking secularisation, mechanism and modernity, which was famously
described by Max Weber as the “disenchantment of the world”. The modern
city – where people “exercise” rather than engage in ritual practice, and where
public parks replaced temples and gardens – is constructed as an external environment that has been stripped of magic and “disenchanted of its gods and
demons” (Weber 2013: 290). In place of a magical atmosphere, modernity
constructs a rational, intellectualised cosmos, which, for the first time, is capable of being measured, quantified and understood.
Charles Taylor builds on these Weberian ideas in his work A Secular Age.
For Taylor, the great distinction between modern times and that of our ancestors of five hundred years ago “is that they lived in an ‘enchanted’ world, and
we do not” (Taylor 2008). He explores this distinction by way of a shift from
what he calls a “porous self” in which “the line between personal agency and
impersonal force was not clearly drawn” (ibid.) to a “buffered” self in which
thoughts, feelings and meanings occur within us. In the enchanted world,
spirits and other external nonhuman agencies impacted us from the outside,
bringing meaning to the world. Modern secularisation banishes these entities,
leaving us alone in a passive world of mechanistic matter, or nature, that is
firmly under our control.
Recent scholarship, however, has questioned the narrative of modern secularisation. Media scholars, for example, have shown that the emergence of
electric technology is deeply intertwined with the occult revival of the late
nineteenth century.17 In his book The Myth of Disenchantment: Magic, Modernity, and the Birth of the Human Sciences, Jason A. Josephson-Storm goes
16 See also Chen 1995 and Brownell 1995.
17 See Sconce 2000 and Stolow 2013.
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so far as to challenge the idea that modernity is based on a disenchanted nature by arguing that disenchantment is itself a myth, which arose within a
profoundly magical milieu (Josephson-Storm 2017). Most critical, for us, are
the feminist “new materialists” who counter “Weber’s disenchantment tale”.18
Jane Bennett makes a powerful case for an “enchanted materialism”, which
rejects the distinction between passive matter and vital life. By remaining attuned to the “liveliness of nonhuman matter” this philosophical orientation
leaves room for a “state of wonder” and “an element of surprise”. A conception of modernity, which “is always already filled with lively and enchanting,
albeit non-purposive forces”, Bennett argues, allows for “a contemporary world
sprinkled with natural and cultural sites that have the power to ‘enchant’”
(Bennett 2013: 3). For Bennett this “mood of enchantment” has profound
implications for an ethical life. “The very characterization of the world as
disenchanted,” she warns, “ignores and then discourages affective attachment
to that world” (Bennett 2001: 3).
7. Chinese cities between enchantment and disenchantment
In the contemporary urban Sinosphere one can witness the continued relevance of self-cultivation. Public parks, for instance, are intended as secular
spaces devoid of any enchantment. Celebrated as strategic spaces to “green
the city”, they are offered to citizens as places to exercise and relax with family and friends. And yet, if one looks closer, ideas related to self-cultivation
shape the lives of many park users. If one visits gardens and parks in Beijing,
Shanghai, Hong Kong or Taipei during the early morning hours, one will always encounter groups of people practicing taijiquan or qigong – in the hope
of improving their health, increasing their mental and physical powers and
attaining to higher spiritual states. Singing, dancing, calligraphy, photography, keeping birds and fish, playing musical instruments, as well as diet and
nutrition, constitute some of the practices of today’s yangsheng. “In Beijing
nowadays one sees life being cultivated wherever there is a little open space,”
write Farquhar and Zhang (2005: 306). Farquhar and Zhang are interested in
the ways in which these everyday practices operate at a “micropolitical” level
to “craft non-confrontational responses” to the power of the State. In this, they
are also attentive to the “pleasures offered by yangsheng”. In the play and
friendships of practitioners, they see novel formations of civil society “emerging
in the parks and vacant lots where yangsheng takes place” (Farquhar / Zhang
2005: 313). This collective culture is not directed by the politics of resistance,
but is focused instead on the “collective crafting of the good life”.
18 For more on New Materialism see Coole / Frost 2010.
Urban Cultivation in Shanghai
In her documentary Writing on Water, Angela Zito records a group of
seniors who gather in a park to practice the art and ethic of water calligraphy.
In her ethnographic reflections, Zito writes of the park as a “third place”, a
space that is “not fundamentally organized by the state, family obligations, or
new commodified forms of work and consumption” (Zito 2014: 13). Instead,
the community that gathers to write in the park transforms the secular space
by opening a space for the sacred. With joy, humour, beauty and enchantment, they embody a “gongfu, or a yangsheng (life cultivation) practice”.
Such practices, writes Zito, “entail a politics, whether they seem to or not: the
art and politics of the everyday” (Zito 2014: 19).
Ethnographic evidence suggests that Chinese embodied traditions still involve, in some way or another, harnessing the cosmic powers of qi. From martial arts to taijiquan and qigong, and even acupuncture and herbal therapies,
today’s practices are based on a common set of ideas about the cosmos and the
human body, one that does not postulate a clear dichotomy between the mind
and the body. Crucially, we view cultivating, nurturing, but also managing
and disciplining the body, as widespread forms of urban religious practice.
For a committed practitioner, the signs of religious accomplishments are typically considered to be health, longevity and the ability to effortlessly perform
extraordinary feats. During the so-called qigong re or “qigong fever” of the
1980s and 90s, many masters imparted their knowledge in the urban parks of
Shanghai, Beijing, Chengdu and many other cities.
Practitioners look for the positive effects of practice on their health. Every
morning Jing’an Park in Shanghai’s city centre is enlivened by this same culture of embodied practice. Like the city itself, it has for decades been subjected
to a relentless process of secularisation. Importantly, however, as with other
urban parks of contemporary China, it sits on land long regarded as numinous.19
The origin of the numinosity and efficacy of Jing’an Temple can be traced back
to around the third century CE and to an association with a spring named by
local people “the bubbling well”, or “the eye of the sea”. Local people believed
that the well would never dry up and thought that it was directly connected to
the sea. During the period of the Republic during the 1920s, a time of religious
activism that witnessed the proliferation of Buddhist-inspired activities, practitioners strongly took hold of this numinous core, thereby contributing to shaping this part of Shanghai. The Chinese Buddhist Association (中國佛教會),
established in 1929, was headquartered in close proximity to Jing’an Temple,
within the substantial grounds of the four-acre “Enlightenment Garden” (覺園).
Many other groups used these gardens, including the Shanghai Buddhist Pure
Karma Association, the Bodhi Study Society and the Buddha’s Voice Radio.
19 There are many studies on Chinese sacred and numinous sites. See for example James Robson, Power
of Place: The Religious Landscape of the Southern Sacred Peak (Nanyue 南嶽) in Medieval China, Harvard
East Asian Monographs, Cambridge: Harvard University Asia Center 2009. For Jing’an see Tarocco 2015.
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Also nearby was perhaps the most aspirational and visionary garden of Shanghai, the Aili Gardens (愛麗園). The garden was destroyed and yet its memory
lingers on in the landscaping practices of many contemporary sites, particularly
in Taiwan.20 Aili Garden extended for over 171 mu (about 11 hectares) and
contained eight “scenic spots” of Buddhist inspiration, pavilions, pagodas, a
stone boat, a Buddhist temple, a theatre, an artificial stream, a lake and several
ponds. It combined the setting of the traditional scholar’s landscape garden
with an array of Buddhist-inspired modern facilities. The Bubbling Well Road
Cemetery, a graveyard for Shanghai residents opened in 1898, was also located
in this area and was subsequently destroyed during the Cultural Revolution.
To a certain extent, one can view the creation of Jing’an Park as an attempt
to mitigate the desecration and to counter its ominous potential through the
magical efficacy of the cultivated spaces of Jing’an Temple (see Tarocco 2015).
One should bear in mind that the Chinese belief in “efficacy” (靈 ling), the
powers attributed to spiritual entities, is predicated on deep-seated fears that
the dead are able to interfere with the living and not only in friendly ways.
Spirits harbouring a vengeance will often try to do harm, inflicting illness and
disaster upon the living.21 Ultimately, the embodied cultural practices of cultivation involve deep engagement, beyond the shell of the interiorised modern
subject, with unseen forces that come from outside – whether as ghosts or
spirits, qi, the noumenon or nature as manifest in the garden.22 We contend
that the creative practices of cultivation are part of a deep undercurrent of
enchanted modernity, which may have the power to forge new, alternative
relations between nature and culture, external landscape and embodied interior,
urban future and traditional past. Throughout the 20th and 21st centuries the
embodied cultural practices of cultivation are continuously harnessed as a
strategy of re-enchantment. Today, they reflect the deep and lively cultural
concerns of China’s contemporaneity and open up the possibility of reconfiguring urban nature and the megacities of the Chinese world.
20 One can look for instance at the gardens of the Dharma Drum complex outside Taipei.
21 See for instance the essays in Watson / Rawski 1988; see also Hansen 1990 and Glahn 2003.
22 Mou’s work on cultivation echoes the writings of Michel Foucault, who called for a return to thinking
as a practice in the “art of life”. See Foucault 1997 and Davidson 1994.
Urban Cultivation in Shanghai
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