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The Divine Eye and the Diaspora: Vietnamese Syncretism Becomes Transpacific Caodaism

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What is the relationship between syncretism and diaspora? Caodaism is a large but almost unknown new religion that provides answers to this question. Born in Vietnam during the struggles of decolonization, shattered and spatially dispersed by cold war conflicts, it is now reshaping the goals of its four million followers. Colorful and strikingly eclectic, its “outrageous syncretism” incorporates Chinese, Buddhist, and Western religions as well as world figures like Victor Hugo, Jeanne d’Arc, Vladimir Lenin, and (in the USA) Joseph Smith, the founder of Mormonism.

The book looks at the connections between “the age of revelations” (1925-1934) in French Indochina and the “age of diaspora” (1975-present) when many Caodai leaders and followers went into exile. Structured in paired biographies to trace relations between masters and disciples, now separated by oceans, it focuses on five members of the founding generation and their followers or descendants in California, showing the continuing obligation to honor those who forged the initial vision to “bring the gods of the East and West together.” Diasporic congregations in California have interacted with New Age ideas and stereotypes of a “Walt Disney fantasia of the East,” at the same time that temples in Vietnam have re-opened their doors after decades of severe restrictions.

Caodaism forces us to reconsider how anthropologists study religious mixtures in postcolonial settings. Its dynamics challenge the unconscious Eurocentrism of our notions of how religions are bounded and conceptualized.

306 pages, Kindle Edition

First published August 4, 2015

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Janet Hoskins

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161 reviews2 followers
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June 11, 2023
read this for fun out of interest
learned a lot, good time
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47 reviews1 follower
August 21, 2024
The book is made up of several biographies of both recent and historical movers and shakers of Caodaism. There is less of a focus on standard practitioners, which I would have liked to see given the extensiveness of Hoskins’ decade of fieldwork. Still a highly instructive tale of postcolonial globalism.
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