essay

The sexual politics of karmic retribution

anthropology of taiwanese societyStanford, Calif. • Published In 1981 • Pages: 381-396, 468-469

By: Seaman, Gary.

Abstract
Seaman examined beliefs in the polluting power of women and their bodies in relation to an evident paradox of funeral rites, at which sons must symbolically drink of their birth blood as proof of their filial piety toward their mothers. The text of the ritual Blood Bowl Sutra that is performed at women's funerals is presented and analyzed, as is the ceremony and its basis in both notions of female uncleanliness and women's actual social ambiguity.
Subjects
Literary texts
Gender status
Burial practices and funerals
Purification and atonement
Congregations
culture
Taiwan Hokkien
HRAF PubDate
1995
Region
Asia
Sub Region
East Asia
Document Type
essay
Evaluation
Creator Type
Ethnologist
Document Rating
5: Excellent Primary Data
Analyst
M. A. Marcus; Marlene Martin
Field Date
1970-1976
Coverage Date
not specified
Coverage Place
P'u-li Basin, central Taiwan (p. 382)
Notes
Gary Seaman
Includes bibliography
LCSH
Taiwanese