The Red Thread: Buddhist Approaches to Sexuality, by Faure, Bernard
Reviewed by D.E. Perushek
Library Journal Vol.123 No.20 Dec 1998 p.113
COPYRIGHT 1998 Reed Publishing USA
The author of major works on Zen, Faure (religion, Stanford) here turns his gaze to sexuality in Buddhism, which binds its practitioners to human existence as if by a red thread. His focus is on Chinese and Japanese Buddhism, with lesser emphasis on India, Tibet, and Korea. Progressing through an examination of passion and discipline, transgression and vice, the book culminates in two chapters dealing largely with the tradition in Japan of "male love" (nanshoku) and its manifestations both in and beyond the monastic life. The principles that passions are no different from awakening and that ultimate truth is beyond good and evil receive a thoroughly documented, cross-cultural explanation. Faure's examination also touches on other transgressions, such as drinking or eating meat. The relative silence on transgressions by females emanates from their irrelevance in the system. Faure plans a companion volume in which women will play a more prominent role. Recommended for academic collections.--D.E. Perushek, Northwestern Univ. Lib., Evanston, IL