The Buddhist Basketball Association: sport practice and the cultivation of the body among Tai Lue monastics

R. Casas
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Abstract

Abstract Traditional academic accounts of the body in Buddhism have paid little attention to the relationship between actual religious specialists and their bodies. This article explores this issue looking at sport practice among monks and novices belonging to a minority group in Southwest China, the Tai Lue of Sipsong Panna. In the last few years, basketball in particular has become popular among members of this monastic community. It has also come to be seen by both outsiders and insiders as proof of the defectiveness of monasticism in this region. Looking at this phenomenon from an anthropological perspective, and emphasizing the temporary character of monastic ordination in Sipsong Panna, the paper argues that, far from being something alien to their practice or an external imposition of modernity, sport practice connects with a centuries-old tradition of bodily cultivation among local monastics, and is today a fundamental part of their holistic development as men and as members of a minority group in contemporary China.
佛教篮球协会:大略僧人的体育实践与身体修养
传统的佛教身体学术研究很少关注实际宗教专家与其身体之间的关系。本文以中国西南地区少数民族——西松盘南大略的僧众和新手的体育实践为例,探讨了这一问题。在过去的几年里,篮球尤其在这个修道院社区的成员中变得流行起来。它也被局外人和局内人视为该地区修道制度缺陷的证明。本文从人类学的角度来看待这一现象,并强调了Sipsong Panna寺院受戒的暂时性,认为体育实践与他们的实践完全不同,也不是现代性的外在强加,而是与当地僧侣数百年的身体修炼传统联系在一起,今天是他们作为男人和当代中国少数群体成员的整体发展的基本组成部分。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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