Functional Displacement in a Confucian Temple: Daytime Publicness, Image-Making, and Eventized Ritual at the Tonghai Wenmiao (Yunnan)

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Abstract

This article examines how the Tonghai Temple of Confucius (Wenmiao) in Yuxi, Yunnan is practically redefined in everyday life when most users treat it as a daytime leisure commons rather than a site of routine worship. Drawing on 30 + short, repeated observations (30–60 minutes each) across weekdays, weekends, and Spring Festival periods, and supplemented by publicly available documentation of festival programming (2017–2026), the study maps how practices are distributed across time, bodies, and expectations. Findings reveal a stable morning–daytime ecology: retirees repeatedly occupy a small set of micro-sites for Tai Chi, dance, and other bodily routines, while families and tourists move through the compound in sequential strolls punctuated by short stops, especially around the “Sea of Learning” pond. After midday, photography intensifies, reorganizing movement into circulation-with-pauses and longer hánfú portrait sessions supported by a street-to-courtyard service corridor. Ritual does not vanish but is redistributed into thin, optional micro-rituals on ordinary days and thicker, standardized ceremonial peaks staged as cultural programming. Conceptually, the article proposes “functional displacement” to describe this configuration.

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