CCS Fall 2025 Webinar Series: Religion Through Food and Family in Chinese Trad
September 24, 1:00pm - 2:30pmMānoa Campus, Zoom
The Beef Taboo in China explains how and why, around the turn of the second millennium, the Chinese determined that cattle should not be slaughtered or eaten. This taboo remained prevalent until the beginning of the twentieth century and is still observed by some today. Goossaert situates this prohibition within evolving Chinese attitudes toward animals and meat and juxtaposes the taboo with vegetarianism and other forms of meat ethics. He argues that the emergence of this specific practice must be understood in several contexts, notably a new agricultural economy and ecology in early modern times that protected plow cattle and marginalized pastures; a sacrificial reform that eliminated beef as the standard offering to gods and spirits; and the development of Daoist rituals, cults, and moral theology that tabooed beef and made this observance a linchpin of Chinese civilization. Literature for Little Bodhisattvas argues that picture books are a new genre of religious writing that reframes Buddhism and offer fresh perspectives on its teachings for both children and adults. Surveying Taiwanese Buddhism from the ground up, Heller explores the changing family dynamics that have made children into a crucial audience for Buddhist education and the home a key site for Buddhist cultivation. By taking picturebooks seriously as part of the Buddhist textual tradition, Heller demonstrates their engagement with canonical sources alongside innovations for modern audiences. Close readings analyzing both text and image trace narrative themes about Buddhist figures, and connect representations of buddhas and bodhisattvas to a visual culture where new values such as cuteness are articulated. Heller shows that picture books equip children with strategies to interpret everyday life in Buddhist ways and provide religious models for action in the modern world.
Event Sponsor
Center for Chinese Studies, Mānoa Campus
More Information
Adriana Choi, 8089568891, choiadri@hawaii.edu
Wednesday, September 24 |
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10:00am |
Campus Clothing Swap Mānoa Campus, 好色先生网站 惭腻苍辞补 Campus Center Courtyard (2465 Campus Rd, Honolulu, HI 96822)
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10:00am |
Digital Scholarship Workshop: Intro to Podcasting Mānoa Campus, Hamilton Library 306 or Zoom
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11:00am |
Get FREE Legal Advice from our Professional-in-Residence, Greg Kim Mānoa Campus, Walter Dods, Jr. RISE Center, Level 2
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11:00am |
Design workshop for imagining the future of Legacy Path and Andrews Amphitheat Mānoa Campus, Legacy Path
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12:00pm |
The Ecotone with Dr. Gillian Bogart - Making Livelihoods in Muddy Margins Mānoa Campus, Moore Hall, Room 319
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1:00pm |
CCS Fall 2025 Webinar Series: Religion Through Food and Family in Chinese Trad Mānoa Campus, Zoom
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3:00pm |
Study Abroad Info Meeting - Semester in Seville, Spain Mānoa Campus, Moore 258 or Zoom
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4:30pm |
Public Administration Information Session Mānoa Campus, SAUNDERS 541/ZOOM
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4:30pm |
Entrepreneurship Live with Timothy Kim from Gochi Mānoa Campus, Walter Dods, Jr. RISE Center, Level 2
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5:00pm |
Game Night at Hamilton Library Mānoa Campus, Hamilton Library
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5:00pm |
AS好色先生网站WO General Senate Meeting West Oʻahu Campus, Online via Zoom or Student Life Center (Campus Center 214)
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6:30pm |
NavNight Mānoa Campus, 惭腻苍辞补 Campus, Honolulu Christian Church 2207 Oahu Ave, Honolulu, HI 96822
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7:30pm |
The Yellow Boat Mānoa Campus, 1770 East-West Rd
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