TY - BOOK AU - Heirman, Ann AU - Torck, Mathieu AB - Buddhist monasteries, in both Ancient India and China, have played a crucial social role, for religious as well as for lay people. They rightfully attract the attention of many scholars, discussing historical backgrounds, institutional networks, or influential masters. Still, some aspects of monastic life have not yet received the attention they deserve. This book therefore aims to study some of the most essential, but often overlooked, issues of Buddhist life: namely, practices and objects of bodily care. For monastic authors, bodily care primarily involves bathing, washing, cleaning, shaving and trimming the nails, activities of everyday life that are performed by lay people and monastics alike. In this sense, they are all highly recognizable and, while structuring monastic life, equally provide a potential bridge between two worlds that are constantly interacting with each other: monastic people and their lay followers. Bodily practices might be viewed as relatively simple and elementary, but it is exactly through their triviality that they give us a clear insight into the structure and development of Buddhist monasteries. Over time, Buddhist monks and nuns have, through their painstaking effort into regulating bodily care, defined the identity of the Buddhist saṃgha, overtly displaying it to the laity. DO - 10.26530/OAPEN_466590 ID - OAPEN ID: 466590 ID - OAPEN ID: OCN: 908083587 KW - india KW - bodily care KW - buddhism KW - china KW - Chinese language KW - History of China KW - Monastery KW - Monk KW - Sangha KW - Vinaya L1 - https://library.oapen.org/bitstream/id/e20ff51e-3433-4c8a-bdba-660cef3f2d0e/466590.pdf LA - English LK - http://library.oapen.org/handle/20.500.12657/33493 PB - Academia Press PY - 2012 SN - 9789038220147 TI - A Pure Mind in a Clean Body : Bodily Care in the Buddhist Monasteries of Ancient India and China ER -