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From the Tea to the Coffee Ceremony: Modernizing Buddhist Material Culture in Contemporary Korea |
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Author |
Kaplan, Uri (著)
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Source |
Material Religion: The Journal of Objects, Art and Belief
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Volume | v.13 n.1 |
Date | 2017 |
Pages | 1 - 22 |
Publisher | Bloomsbury Journals |
Publisher Url |
http://www.bloomsbury.com/journals
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Location | London, UK [倫敦, 英國] |
Content type | 期刊論文=Journal Article |
Language | 英文=English |
Note | Uri Kaplan began his academic career in Anthropology and Asian Studies at Tel Aviv University, pursued graduate work in Korean Studies and Asian Philosophy at Yonsei and Korea Universities, and received a PhD in Asian Religions from Duke University in 2015. |
Keyword | Buddhism; Korea; tea; coffee; food anthropology; material culture; religion; ritual; modernity |
Abstract | Tea has been associated with East Asian Buddhism at least since the eighth-century. Buddhist monks were involved in cultivating, selling, and transporting tea from its birthplace in southern China to Korea and Japan. In addition to using it as an offering and as an aid for wakefulness in meditation, they developed a Buddhist tea lore which has been mirrored in their poetry, myths and monastic rituals. Tea has become such a central symbol of the contemplative life in East Asia that it is rather surprising to discover that in some of the major monasteries in Korea today over half of the meditation monks are said to have switched to coffee. In fact, numerous Korean temples today possess top-of-the-line hand-drip (filter) coffee machines, some offer Buddhist coffee workshops and barista certificates for monks and laypeople, and others replace their old tea shops with new modern cafés. In this paper I will present what I think are fascinating ethnographic examples of the recent Korean Buddhist coffee trend, and discuss the debates regarding the appropriateness of coffee to Buddhist practice. I will illustrate how some Korean Buddhists attempt to remain relevant in contemporary coffee-crazed Korean society by re-branding the taste of Buddhism and creatively associating coffee with propagation, meditation and insight. |
Table of contents | Abstract 2 Introduction 3 Fetishizing Tea in East Asia 6 The Social Career of Coffee 8 Coffee Monks 10 Tea Versus Coffee 16 Buddhism and Coffee 18 Acknowledgements 20 Funding 20 Notes and References 20 |
ISSN | 17432200 (P); 17518342 (E) |
DOI | https://doi.org/10.1080/17432200.2016.1271969 |
Hits | 255 |
Created date | 2023.08.03 |
Modified date | 2023.08.03 |

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