中世纪中国宗教中的超身性、物质性和肉体性

Dominic Steavu
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引用次数: 2

摘要

在中世纪的中国,护身符(fu)和圣图(tu)是宗教文本中无处不在的元素。因为它们是由神圣的难以辨认的神秘模式组成的,意义不是由护身符和图表上的标记产生的;相反,它被转移到物体本身,无论它们是在经文和仪式手册中二维地表现出来,还是外化和物化到物理支撑上。在这方面,护身符和图表的客体性和可触摸的物质性使它们成为直接进入超自然的速记符号。本研究借鉴了中世纪道教和深奥佛教中尚未充分研究的经典,将护身符和图表视为准文本对象,揭示了这样一个事实:它们不仅被动地构成了文本阅读的框架,而且在许多情况下也构成了被阅读的“文本”的主要和决定层面。通过这种方式,护身符和图表突出的来源首先是通过它们的物质方面,即准文本来接近的。更重要的是,在文本中出现的护身符和图表通常意味着外化和物化,在某些情况下,在专家的身体上或在他们的心灵之眼中可视化,从而混淆了准性,物质性和肉体性。在两个引人注目的例子中,从业者被指示体现并成为实际的仪式对象,模糊文本,对象和身体之间的界限,在一个单一的神圣场所。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Paratextuality, Materiality, and Corporeality in Medieval Chinese Religions
In medieval China, talismans (fu) and sacred diagrams (tu) were ubiquitous elements in religious texts. Since they were composed of divine illegible esoteric patterns, meaning was not produced by the markings talismans and diagrams bore; it was, rather, displaced onto the objects themselves, whether they were two-dimensionally represented in scriptures and ritual manuals or externalized and materialized onto physical supports. In this respect, the objecthood and palpable materiality of talismans and diagrams made them shorthand tokens for direct access to the supernatural. Drawing on emblematic yet understudied scriptures of medieval Daoism and esoteric Buddhist, the present study considers talismans and diagrams as paratextual objects, bringing to light the fact that they not only passively frame the reading of a text but in many instances also constitute the primary and determining level of “text” that is read. In this way, sources in which talismans and diagrams featured prominently were approached first and foremost through their material aspects, namely paratexts. What is more, the talismans and diagrams that appeared in texts were often meant to be externalized and materialized, in some cases onto the bodies of adepts or visualized in their mind’s eye, thereby conflating paratextuality, materiality, and corporeality. In a pair of striking examples, practitioners are instructed to embody and become actual ritual objects, blurring the boundaries between text, object, and body in one single divine locus.
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