Both Like and Unlike: Rebirth, Olfaction, and the Transspecies Imagination in Modern Chinese Buddhism

This essay considers the importance of the transspecies imagination for moral cultivation in contemporary Chinese Buddhism. Drawing on scriptural, theoretical, and fieldwork-based ethnographic data, it argues that olfaction—often considered the most “animalistic” of the...

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Main Author: Lina Verchery
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2019-06-01
Series:Religions
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2077-1444/10/6/364
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spelling doaj-f28235410759497b8593ee145ff333992020-11-25T01:16:17ZengMDPI AGReligions2077-14442019-06-0110636410.3390/rel10060364rel10060364Both Like and Unlike: Rebirth, Olfaction, and the Transspecies Imagination in Modern Chinese BuddhismLina Verchery0Committee on the Study of Religion, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA 02138, USAThis essay considers the importance of the transspecies imagination for moral cultivation in contemporary Chinese Buddhism. Drawing on scriptural, theoretical, and fieldwork-based ethnographic data, it argues that olfaction—often considered the most “animalistic” of the human senses—is uniquely efficacious for inspiring imaginative processes whereby Buddhists train themselves to inhabit the perspectives of non-human beings. In light of Buddhist theories of rebirth, this means extending human-like status to animals and recognizing the “animal” within the human as well. Responding to recent trends in the Humanities calling for an expanded notion of ontological continuity between the human and non-human—notably inspired by critical animal studies, post-humanism, the new materialism, and the “ontological turn”—this essay contends that Buddhist cosmological ideas, like those that demand the cultivation of the transspecies imagination, present resources for moral reflection that can challenge and enrich current mainstream thinking about humanity’s relation to the nonhuman world.https://www.mdpi.com/2077-1444/10/6/364BuddhismanimalsBuddhist ethicsanthropology of the sensesolfactioncosmologyrebirthvegetarianism
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lina Verchery
spellingShingle Lina Verchery
Both Like and Unlike: Rebirth, Olfaction, and the Transspecies Imagination in Modern Chinese Buddhism
Religions
Buddhism
animals
Buddhist ethics
anthropology of the senses
olfaction
cosmology
rebirth
vegetarianism
author_facet Lina Verchery
author_sort Lina Verchery
title Both Like and Unlike: Rebirth, Olfaction, and the Transspecies Imagination in Modern Chinese Buddhism
title_short Both Like and Unlike: Rebirth, Olfaction, and the Transspecies Imagination in Modern Chinese Buddhism
title_full Both Like and Unlike: Rebirth, Olfaction, and the Transspecies Imagination in Modern Chinese Buddhism
title_fullStr Both Like and Unlike: Rebirth, Olfaction, and the Transspecies Imagination in Modern Chinese Buddhism
title_full_unstemmed Both Like and Unlike: Rebirth, Olfaction, and the Transspecies Imagination in Modern Chinese Buddhism
title_sort both like and unlike: rebirth, olfaction, and the transspecies imagination in modern chinese buddhism
publisher MDPI AG
series Religions
issn 2077-1444
publishDate 2019-06-01
description This essay considers the importance of the transspecies imagination for moral cultivation in contemporary Chinese Buddhism. Drawing on scriptural, theoretical, and fieldwork-based ethnographic data, it argues that olfaction—often considered the most “animalistic” of the human senses—is uniquely efficacious for inspiring imaginative processes whereby Buddhists train themselves to inhabit the perspectives of non-human beings. In light of Buddhist theories of rebirth, this means extending human-like status to animals and recognizing the “animal” within the human as well. Responding to recent trends in the Humanities calling for an expanded notion of ontological continuity between the human and non-human—notably inspired by critical animal studies, post-humanism, the new materialism, and the “ontological turn”—this essay contends that Buddhist cosmological ideas, like those that demand the cultivation of the transspecies imagination, present resources for moral reflection that can challenge and enrich current mainstream thinking about humanity’s relation to the nonhuman world.
topic Buddhism
animals
Buddhist ethics
anthropology of the senses
olfaction
cosmology
rebirth
vegetarianism
url https://www.mdpi.com/2077-1444/10/6/364
work_keys_str_mv AT linaverchery bothlikeandunlikerebirtholfactionandthetransspeciesimaginationinmodernchinesebuddhism
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