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- Title
Disgusting Bodies, Disgusting Religion: The Biology of Tantra.
- Authors
Ellis, Thomas B.
- Abstract
Hard-core Tantric practice is disgusting, a point several scholars make. Scholarly interpretations of Tantric disgustingness, however, tend to follow the lead of Mary Douglas in suggesting that what disgusts is ultimately a reflection of social–historical concerns with borders and boundaries. Such interpretations fail to take seriously the Tantric consumption of feces, menstrual blood, urine, semen, and phlegm. Likewise, they fail to take seriously the particular sexual act involved, that is, intercourse with a menstruating, riding-astride, out-of-caste, mother-substitute. Consulting contemporary disgust research, I suggest that hard-core Tantra is literally disgusting because it is literally maladaptive. Disgust was naturally selected to deter the ingestion of bio-toxic pathogens as well as the practice of suboptimal sexual intercourse. Disgust maintains the species' viability. Tantra confounds disgust and thus disgusts. Tantra engages antibiological behaviors in its characteristically religious war against the body. As a disgusting religion, Tantra may be a perfected religion.
- Subjects
TANTRIC Buddhism; AVERSION; HUMAN body in religion; HUMAN sexuality in Buddhism; BIOLOGY; BUDDHISM &; philosophy; PHILOSOPHY of religion; BUDDHISM; RELIGION
- Publication
Journal of the American Academy of Religion, 2011, Vol 79, Issue 4, p879
- ISSN
0002-7189
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1093/jaarel/lfr077