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This book addresses the thorny issue regarding the authenticity of the Yulanpen Sutra with a view to clearing up the centuries-long confusion and controversy surrounding its translation and transmission in China. The main objective of this study is thus to check and confirm the authenticity of the Yulanpen Sutra , which features Mulian adventuring into the Preta realm to rescue his mother.
Traditionally attributed to the Indo-Scythian Dharmarak¿a (Ch. Zhu Fahu, ca. 266-308) as the translator, the sutra is now widely believed to have been created by Chinese Buddhists to foster sinicisation
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Produktbeschreibung
This book addresses the thorny issue regarding the authenticity of the Yulanpen Sutra with a view to clearing up the centuries-long confusion and controversy surrounding its translation and transmission in China. The main objective of this study is thus to check and confirm the authenticity of the Yulanpen Sutra, which features Mulian adventuring into the Preta realm to rescue his mother.

Traditionally attributed to the Indo-Scythian Dharmarak¿a (Ch. Zhu Fahu, ca. 266-308) as the translator, the sutra is now widely believed to have been created by Chinese Buddhists to foster sinicisation and transformation of Indian Buddhism on the grounds that there is no extant Yulanpen Sutra in Indic sources and that the sutra stresses Confucian filial piety and ancestor worship, amongst others. Through a critical review of the major arguments prevailing in modern scholarship against its authenticity and a close examination of textual and contextual evidence concerning the Yulanpen Sutra, this book demonstrates that filial piety and ancestor worship are also deeply rooted in ancient Indian culture and that the Mulian myth reflects the recurring motif of 'rescuing the hungry ghost of a sinful mother' in Indian mythology and religious literature.

In so doing, this book sheds new light on the Indic origins of the Yulanpen Sutra and the Ghost Festival in general and of the Mulian myth and the Mulian drama - the oldest Chinese ritual drama that has been alive onstage for nearly one thousand years - in particular.


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Autorenporträt
Xiaohuan Zhao is an Associate Professor of Chinese Literary and Theatre Studies at the University of Sydney.