Pro-Life or Pro-Choice? Humanistic Buddhists’ Voices Surrounding Abortion in Contemporary Taiwan

Authors

  • Grace Cheng-Ying Lin John Abbott College

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.33182/ijor.v2i1.1107

Keywords:

abortion, Humanistic Buddhism, Taiwan, abortion ritual, social movements

Abstract

In Taiwan, abortion was legalized in 1984. This paper examines the voices surrounding abortion expressed by monasteries in Humanistic Buddhism, a prominent Buddhist philosophy practiced in modern Taiwan. Humanistic Buddhism emphasizes that it is a “religion of the people.†However, in addition to the law of karma and causality, the value of all life forms is prioritized based on the ethics of “non-harming (ahimsÄ).†When some monasteries insist that abortion is killing, resulting in karmic retribution, some express sympathy with a woman’s decision to abort. When some monasteries promote a newly popularized ritual to appease aborted fetuses, some are keenly critical of the exploitation of women and manipulation of scriptures. Through a discursive analysis, this paper demonstrates the wide spectrum of Buddhist narratives in response to reproductive politics embedded in the conflicts between modernity and tradition, as well as locality and globality.

Downloads

Published

2021-05-20

Issue

Section

Articles

How to Cite

Pro-Life or Pro-Choice? Humanistic Buddhists’ Voices Surrounding Abortion in Contemporary Taiwan. (2021). International Journal of Religion, 2(1), 61-79. https://doi.org/10.33182/ijor.v2i1.1107

Similar Articles

21-30 of 643

You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.