"Like Silkworms in Their Cocoons": Silkworm-Human Relations in Middle-Period Chinese Buddhism

This article is about how silkworms spun Buddhism in middle-period China (ca. third-tenth centuries CE). It traces the activities and influences of silkworms in Chinese Buddhist texts, which it treats as products of intrinsic entanglements among human and nonhuman agents. Throughout middle-period Ch...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Young, Stuart H. 1974- (Author)
Format: Electronic Article
Language:English
Check availability: HBZ Gateway
Interlibrary Loan:Interlibrary Loan for the Fachinformationsdienste (Specialized Information Services in Germany)
Published: 2025
In: History of religions
Year: 2025, Volume: 64, Issue: 3, Pages: 133-167
Standardized Subjects / Keyword chains:B China / Buddhism / Sericulture / Human being / Animals / Material popular culture / History 300-1000
IxTheo Classification:AG Religious life; material religion
BL Buddhism
KCA Monasticism; religious orders
TD Late Antiquity
TE Middle Ages
ZE Economy / Economics
Online Access: Volltext (lizenzpflichtig)
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Summary:This article is about how silkworms spun Buddhism in middle-period China (ca. third-tenth centuries CE). It traces the activities and influences of silkworms in Chinese Buddhist texts, which it treats as products of intrinsic entanglements among human and nonhuman agents. Throughout middle-period China, silk was the fabric of Buddhist monasticism. Silk enmeshed Buddhist monastery precincts, institutional economies, and modes of literary production. Chinese Buddhist texts were inscribed on silk; bound, wrapped, and tied in silk; and replete with discursive vestiges of silk and its other-than-human producers. This article shows how silkworms emerged through these sources as thinking, feeling, and moral subjects, as the kin of humans and deities, and as bodhisattvas themselves. It aims to foreground the many "small agencies" that contributed to building Chinese Buddhism from the ground up, literally: from the nutrients of the soil, through the leaves of trees and bodies of insects, to the halls of capital monasteries and doctrinal discourses of transmitted Buddhist texts. Silkworm caterpillars consumed mulberry leaves, secreted silk filaments, cocooned their bodies, transformed into pupae and moths, and were boiled to death in the cauldrons of human sericulture industry. Through these willful acts of consumptive production, silkworms embodied in form and function, and materialized in silk-spun cocoons, the central truths of the dharma. Silkworms did this through their intrinsic interrelations with human modes of sociomaterial production and samsaric existence. And in turn, human beings wove Buddhism in middle-period China, as with their material livelihoods, through the many small agencies of silkworm caterpillars.
ISSN:1545-6935
Contains:Enthalten in: History of religions
Persistent identifiers:DOI: 10.1086/733312