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Women and Buddhism in East Asian History: The Case of the Blood Bowl Sutra, Part I: China |
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Author |
Meeks, Lori (著)
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Source |
Religion Compass
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Volume | v.14 n.4 |
Date | 2020.04 |
Pages | 14 |
Publisher | Wiley-Blackwell Publishing Ltd. |
Publisher Url |
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com
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Location | West Sussex, UK |
Content type | 期刊論文=Journal Article |
Language | 英文=English |
Abstract | This two-part series examines an often-overlooked aspect of Buddhist practice that was ubiquitous in late medieval and early modern China and Japan: cults to the Blood Bowl Sutra. According to the logic of this indigenous Chinese sutra, women are destined for a special hell composed of uterine blood, where they are to be punished for the pollution they produce during childbirth and/or menstruation. While cults to the Blood Bowl Sutra have mostly disappeared in modern times—and despite the fact that they have been largely forgotten, even by historians of East Asia—they were, by the 16th and 17th centuries, a common part of women's religious lives in both China and Japan. Cults to the Blood Bowl Sutra comprised a diverse set of practices that engaged concerns about female bodies, motherhood, filial piety, and suffering in hell. Part I focuses on the development of such cults in China, and Part II focuses on the cults' spread in Japan. |
Table of contents | Abstract 1 1. Introduction 2 2. An Indigenous Chinese Sutra 2 3. Early Chinese Cults to the Blood Bowl Sutra 4 4. The Woman Huang Narrative 6 5. Blood Hell Services for Women 7 6. The Question of Women's Agency 10 7. Concluding Remarks 11 Acknowledgements 12 Endnotes 12 References 13 |
ISSN | 17498171 (E) |
DOI | https://doi.org/10.1111/rec3.12336 |
Hits | 181 |
Created date | 2023.08.10 |
Modified date | 2023.08.10 |
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