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Theology and Sexuality, Vol. 12, No. 3, 285-307 (2006)
DOI: 10.1177/1355835806065383

The Cultural and Religious Background of Sexual Vampirism in Ancient China

Paul R. Goldin

prg{at}sas.upenn.edu

This paper considers sexual macrobiotic techniques of ancient China in their cultural and religious milieu, focusing on the text known as Secret Instructions of the Jade Bedchamber, which explains how the Spirit Mother of the West, originally an ordinary human being like anyone else, devoured the life force of numerous young boys by copulating with them, and thereby transformed herself into a famed goddess. Although many previous studies of Chinese sexuality have highlighted such methods (the noted historian R.H. van Gulik was the first to refer to them as ‘sexual vampirism’), it has rarely been asked why learned and intelligent people of the past took them seriously. The inquiry here, by considering some of the most common ancient criticisms of these practices, concludes that practitioners did not regard decay as an inescapable characteristic of matter; consequently it was widely believed that, if the cosmic processes were correctly understood, one could devise techniques that may forestall senectitude indefinitely.

Key Words: sexual vampirism • macrobiotics • sex practices • Chinese religion • qi • Daoism


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