A Buddhist Cosmology in Food

The Buddhist cosmology of the Pali texts comprises 31 realms reaching from beings in hell at the bottom of the scale to the gods of the formless realms with humans somewhere in the middle. In practice, however, the relationship between humans and non-humans in Southeast Asia finds its expression more often than not by way of food offerings or feasts, which are prepared in the still largely female domain of the kitchens. Food is offered to beings in all five (or sometimes six) forms of existence accepted by all Buddhist schools: full meals for the Buddha(s) at temples in the morning and on special occasions; a pūjā of fresh fruits and coconuts for a deity at the local shrine; a plate of food for a deceased relative after the funeral; food scraps collected from monks’ plates and taken out for the hungry ghosts (pretas); alms food for monks; funeral feasts for friends, relatives and neighbours; food given to the “seven mothers” (kiriammas) to avert misfortune and special food stalls on Buddhist festival days. The film explores the relationship in a series of mini documentaries grounded in ethnography. Filmed by Rita Langer; edited by Rita Langer and Azita Ghassemi. Original music by Kostas Andrikopoulos and Stathis Kampylis. This film is in HD.

Complete download (zip, 657.6 MiB)

Creator(s) Stathis Kampylis, Kostas Andrikopoulos, Laura Frude, Azita Ghassemi, Rita Langer
Funder Leverhulme Trust
Contributor(s) Kostas Andrikopoulos, Stathis Kampylis, Azita Ghassemi
Publication date 19 Jun 2015
Language sin
Publisher University of Bristol
Licence Non-Commercial Government Licence for public sector information
DOI 10.5523/bris.h10sdqnhz4a81tu03yj3qgk9s
Citation Stathis Kampylis, Kostas Andrikopoulos, Laura Frude, Azita Ghassemi, Rita Langer (2015): A Buddhist Cosmology in Food. https://doi.org/10.5523/bris.h10sdqnhz4a81tu03yj3qgk9s
Total size 657.6 MiB

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