Surveilled, harmonized, purified

Ori Tavor
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Abstract

The human body has long occupied a central role in religious praxis across the globe. Recent decades have witnessed a change in academic studies aimed at theorizing the body and its relationship with society and the cosmos. This article adds to this discourse by demonstrating the pervasiveness of the body as a root metaphor in medieval Chinese religious culture. The notion of the body as a microcosmic replica of the social, political, and metaphysical realms, and the need to synchronize it with the natural cycles of the universe, played a key role in the emerging doctrinal and liturgical schemes of Buddhism and Daoism, China’s two main organized religious traditions. Using the apocryphal medieval Buddhist scripture The S?tra of Trapu?a and Bhallika as a case study, and reading it against the backdrop of earlier religious, medical, and philosophical texts, this article argues that visions of the body as an object of surveillance by the celestial authorities, and its purification and harmonization through ethical practices and ritual means, were hailed as the most significant religious activities in Buddhist and Daoist communities alike in medieval China, a feature that continues to occupy a central place in contemporary Chinese religious life.
被监视,协调,净化
长期以来,人体在全球宗教实践中一直占据着中心地位。近几十年来,学术研究发生了变化,旨在将身体及其与社会和宇宙的关系理论化。本文通过展示身体在中世纪中国宗教文化中无处不在的根源隐喻来补充这一论述。身体是社会、政治和形而上学领域的微观复制品,需要与宇宙的自然周期同步,这一概念在中国两大有组织的宗教传统佛教和道教的教义和仪式方案中发挥了关键作用。引用了中世纪的佛经《S?特拉普?本文以佛教和道教为例进行研究,并将其置于早期宗教、医学和哲学文本的背景下进行阅读,认为将身体视为天界当局监视的对象,并通过伦理实践和仪式手段对其进行净化和协调,被誉为中世纪中国佛教和道教团体中最重要的宗教活动。这一特点在当代中国宗教生活中仍然占据着中心地位。
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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