Reading the Soushen Ji: Anomaly, Wonder, and the Medieval Supernatural
The Soushen Ji occupies a foundational place in Chinese literary and religious history because it stands at the point where anomaly, wonder, spirit encounter, and the medieval supernatural begin to take durable prose form. Rather than serving merely as a miscellaneous collection of oddities, it gathers ghosts, revenants, transformations, omens, divine interventions, and uncanny events into one of the earliest major archives of the strange in Chinese civilization. This article examines the Soushen Ji within the Chinese Myth, Legend, and Folklore knowledge series as a key text for understanding how medieval China made the supernatural readable through prose. In its pages, the strange is not simply fantasy. It appears as moral pressure, ritual consequence, narrative memory, and the persistent porosity of the boundary between the seen and unseen.









