- Anna Seidel
Anna Katharina Seidel (1938 –
September 29 ,1991 ) was a German Sinologist who was regarded as an authority in the study ofTaoism . During her 22 years at the Institut du Hobogirin of the Ecole Francaise d’Extreme-Orient in Kyoto, Seidel had become the centre of gravity for the many Western scholars of East Asian studies who ventured to the ancient Japanese capital to conduct research.Early years
The youngest of three children, Seidel was born in
Berlin ,Germany , but spent most of her childhood in the southern city ofMunich . During the Nazi era, her father, who was an aviation engineer, bravely stood by her mother, who was descendant of a distinguished German-Jewish family; they illegally sheltered a Jewish friend at their home throughout theSecond World War , risking adeath penalty . Seidel’s parents encouraged her to pursue intellectual interests from an early age. Having been trained in the fundamentals of Sinology at theUniversity of Munich (1958–1960) and theUniversity of Hamburg (1961), Seidel specialised in the study ofChinese religions inParis , where she studied under two eminent German expatriates,Maxime Kaltenmark andRolf A. Stein from 1961 to 1968. Her doctoral dissertation, "La divinisation de Lao-tseu dans le taoisme des Han" is regarded as a groundbreaking study in the field. In 1969, Seidel was elected into membership of the Ecole Francaise d'Extreme-Orient and despatched toKyoto , the ancient capital ofJapan , where she lived until her death.Research
Here her work was centered upon the compilation of the "Hobogirin", a multivolume encyclopedic dictionary of
Buddhism . She simultaneously had the opportunity to continue her own research on Taoism, becoming one of the world's leading experts in this subject. After a brief marriage to theBoston ian scholarHolmes Welch , with whom she co-edited "Facets of Taoism" (1979), Seidel devoted her life completely to her scholarship and to the Hobogirin Institute.In 1978, she taught Chinese religion as a visiting professor at the
University of Hawaii and at theUniversity of California, Santa Barbara in 1988; she repeatedly rejected lucrative offers from eminent American universities. In 1985, she started the bilingual journal "Cahiers d'Extreme-Asie", which has since become established as an important publication in the study of East Asian religions. The stated purpose of the journal was to draw scholars inEurope , America, andEast Asia closer together. Seidel’s position in Kyoto put her in a unique position to serve as a link between the various geographic ommunities of scholars. She was an international scholar: German in her upbringing and cultural identity, French by citizenship and education, residing and working in Japan, and wooed by the English-speaking academic establishment.Writing
Her published works communicated her thoughts with a clarity which she achieved by avoiding stylistic embellishments and by making no concessions to fashionable theoretical terminology. Seidel's viewpoint on Chinese religion as depicted in her article "Taoism" written for the 15th edition of the
Encyclopædia Britannica (1975), broke the orthodox mould. While her work was founded on early religious texts, which she subjected to the most rigorous philological scrutiny, her analysis of religion extended to all aspects of culture. She placed her main emphasis on religious practice in its historical context, rather than becoming entangled in doctrinal speculation. Seidel was as atheist and did not practice Taoism; despite this, she was noted for approaching religious phenomena with a high level of empathy. Although Seidel she did not undertake long-term systematic fieldwork on Chinese religion, she paid meticulous attention to contemporary religious phenomena, which she interpreted as a continuum with ancient textual traditions. She had a strongly comparative perspective on religion, and consistently observed and recorded the religious landscape wherever she traveled. Her important collections of documents remain in the keeping of the Hobogirin Institute.Seidel died before writing a major synthesis of her reaserch field, though there were some initial attempts in such a direction (the booklet "Taoismus, Die inoffizielle Hochreligion Chinas" and her magisterial "Chronicle of Taoist Studies in the West, 1950-1990"). Her work remained unfinished at the time of her death.
References
*cite journal|first= Lothar |last=von Falkenhausen|year=1992 |month=February |title=Obituary: Anna Katharina Seidel (1938-1991)|journal=
Journal of Asian Studies |volume=51 |issue=1 |pages=pp. 242–243 |accessdate= 2007-11-07
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