Abstract: This article investigates the dynamics of ritual failure in Song-dynasty China by analyzing stories from Hong Mai's 洪邁 (1123–1202) twelfth-century anecdotal collection, the Yijian zhi 《夷堅志》 (Record of the listener) . Placing these narratives into a critical dialogue with modern ritual theories, this study shows that while modern analytical frameworks, such as Ronald L. Grimes's taxonomy of "infelicities," are effective for diagnosing internal ritual breakdowns like procedural errors or personnel misconduct, they are insufficient to explain many failures depicted in the late medieval Chinese materials. The central argument is that numerous rites are portrayed as failing not due to technical mistakes, but because they are nullified by an inexorable external force: karmic retribution. To address this theoretical gap, this article proposes the concept of "cosmological invalidation," a dynamic where a ritual's efficacy is completely overridden by a higher moral-bureaucratic order. Through an analysis of tales involving vengeful ghosts, underworld lawsuits, and unpardonable crimes, this study demonstrates a worldview where ritual performance was often subordinate to an inescapable cosmic justice. By testing modern theories against this pre-modern Chinese context, the paper reveals their cultural assumptions and advocates for a more context-sensitive approach to the study of ritual, one that can account for worldviews where the ultimate success of a rite is determined by divine powers acting within an established metaphysical legal system.
Jingyu Liu (Thu,) studied this question.
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