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From the Deer to the Monkey: How the Transmission of the Jātaka Animal Stories to Medieval China Enriched Chinese Culture and Complemented Confucianism
Author Wu, Guo (著)
Source Studies in Chinese Religions
Volumev.9 n.3 Fall
Date2023
Pages273 - 289
Publisher中国社会科学院=Institute of World Religions, Chinese Academy of Social Sciences(CASS); Taylor & Francis Group
Publisher Url http://casseng.cssn.cn/
LocationLeeds, UK [里茲, 英國]
Content type期刊論文=Journal Article
Language英文=English
Note1. The Subtitle of the Journal: Religion and Weather Changes in Medieval China and Beyond.

2. Author Affiliation: Allegheny College, USA.
KeywordAnimal; Buddhism; Confucianism; Jātaka; Xuanzang
AbstractIn contrast with Chinese literary tradition and Confucianism, there was a multitude of animals and birds in the Jātaka stories, which had yet to be researched as a reference point of Confucianism. Because of Buddhism’s opposition to the use of animals as a sacrifice, its rejection of consuming animal meat, and because animals were considered as a state of the former existence of Śākyamuni Buddha, Buddhist literature gives ample room to animal images as full-fledged main characters and moral agents. A careful analysis of the use of herbivores such as deer, turtles, wild geese, and monkeys as a narrative device in the Jātaka stories demonstrates that personified animals served as a source of inspiration for humans. Turning animals into articulate moral agents render them no longer the object of human sympathy as in Confucianism nor metaphors in philosophical Daoism, but intellectually equal and ethically superior to humans. The Buddhist idea of cherishing all sentient beings was not merely based on compassion but also an egalitarian perspective that acknowledges animals’ subjectivity as autonomous emotional-moral agents. This unique dimension of Buddhism complemented the Confucian anthropocentric worldview and enriched Chinese literature and art.
ISSN23729988 (P); 23729996 (E)
DOI10.1080/23729988.2023.2284006
Hits90
Created date2024.05.15
Modified date2024.05.17



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