The Monsterfact: The Jiang Shi - podcast episode cover

The Monsterfact: The Jiang Shi

Jun 22, 20225 min
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Episode description

In this episode of STBYM’s The Monstrefact, Robert discusses the Jiang Shi or hopping vampire of Chinese folklore…

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Transcript

Speaker 1

Welcome to Stuff to Blow Your Mind, a production of My Heart Radio. Hi, my name is Robert Lamb and this is the Monster Fact, a short form series from Stuff to Blow Your Mind, focusing in on mythical creatures, ideas and monsters in time. Imagine yourself out on the road, so frustratingly close to the walls of the city you've been traveling too, and yet night is falling, the mist is rolling in, and then up ahead you see several figures in the gloom, fellow travelers, a patrol of guards

from the city. You entertain the possibility that they are bandits, and then they do something quite unnatural. They hop like a creature whose legs are bound or stiff with rigor mortis, or perhaps even forgetful of proper bipedal locomotion, and forced to lunge itself forward through physical space like a great writhing worm. The creatures hop and hop again, ever closer to you, And as they get closer you see that they are undead horrors, dressed in robes from the Ching Dynasty,

decayed corpses, burning with unnatural life. As they hop, they reach out towards you with elongated fingernails. They gasp with bloody, faint tooth jaws, and if they catch you, they will drain every last ounce of precious chi from your body. In some ways relatable to Western concepts of the zombie and the vampire, this is the jiang shi. And while Chinese mythology and folklore is filled with various ghosts and monsters, this particular horror seems to emerge from a ching dynasty

crisis concerning the burial of the dead. According to the Afterlife Corpses, A Social History of Unburied Dead Bodies in Chin China sixteen forty four through nineteen eleven by historian Joehi Su, numerous records from the eighteenth and nineteenth century discussed the problem of unburied bodies left upon the ground without proper burial. These were not exclusively the victims of war, famine, or disaster either. They were seemingly, for the most part,

individuals who simply had no permanent grave. This, Sioux writes, was due to changing socioeconomic structure and the resulting imbalance between population and arable land. A family would need to secure claim to the land in order to bury deceased loved ones. If a grave could not be obtained, they

were left out and often abandoned or lost. While jiang Nan was the region most impacted by this, it became an empire wide crisis because it wasn't just about the dead, but it perceived cultural decline in funeral custom and even devotion to one's ancests. While solutions finally emerged, such as public cemeteries and coffin homes, the specter of the jiangshi remained in the Chinese imagination, a specter of the abandoned

and vengeful dead. These beliefs, along with other records Sue writes quote, demonstrate unburied dead bodies as highly abnormal and deeply problematic, representing a dysfunctional aspect of popular death custom. Jiangshi famously play a role in an entire sub genre of Chinese supernatural, horror and comedy films, including Mr. Vampire,

which we watched on Weird House Cinema last year. They're also now featured in Dungeons and Dragons, listed in Ones Van Ripton's Guide to Ravenloft as a challenge level nine monster capable of changing shape and of course, draining the energy of its victims. While sometimes played for comedy, there is a deep and unnatural horror to the Jiangshi, and it absolutely demands a place in your nightmares and at your gaming table. Tune in for additional episodes of The

Monster Fat each week. As always, you can email us at contact at stuff to Blow your Mind dot com. Stuff to Blow Your Mind is production of I Heart Radio. For more podcasts from my Heart Radio, visit the i Heart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to your favorite shows.

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