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[Vol.21 /2012.05] 사업단 연구동향
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SONG Yoo-who, “‘Breaking Blood-pond
(Poxuehu)’ Ritual and Women
in China,”
Asian Journal of Women's Studies, Vol. 18 No.
1(2012.3), pp. 62-86
_ 내용 요약
Although studies
on the social status of Chinese women in modern and contemporary times abound,
little research has been done on the religious ceremony called Poxuehu that was
performed to save the spirit of a deceased mother from the punishment of the blood-pond
hell (xuehu diyu). Blood-pot sutras (xuepenjing) first appeared from the early
tenth century to the twelfth century in the Buddhist community, and later
appeared in Daoist and folk religious communities as well. So, I traced various
historical texts to identify how the ritual has been performed in reality. I
conducted fieldwork for this article during the summer of 2010 (between June
and September) in Nantong, Suzhou, and Kunshan of Jiangsu Province. The ideas
underlying the Poxuehu ritual emphasized the inferiority and uncleanness of
women. The Chinese held the belief that the blood resulting from menstruation
and childbirth was an obstacle to spiritual redemption. Therefore, it cannot be
denied that the Poxuehu ritual had close links with the feminine status within
the patriarchy.
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