Bao-yu: A Mental Disorder or a Cultural Icon?

Journal of Bioethical Inquiry 11 (2):183-189 (2014)
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Abstract

The embodied human subject is dynamically connected to his or her historico-sociocultural context, the soil from which a person’s psyche is nourished as multiplex meanings are absorbed and enable personal development. In each culture certain towering artistic works embody this perspective. The Dream of the Red Chamber introduces Jia Bao-yu—a scion of the prestigious Jia family—and his relationships with a large cast of characters. Bao-yu is controversial but, at the time of the family’s tragic collapse, he can be seen as embodying a spiritual struggle in which his instinct, nature, sensitivity, and creativity are grounded in his transcendent relationship with a fragment of the world stone, an eternal source of energy and creativity. We are invited to draw on a metaphysical level of thought to consider his struggles with man-made hierarchies and a situated historico-sociocultural order in such a way as to live out his spiritual being. As such, the novel is closely relevant to questions of spirituality in bioethics. Through personal experiences, passions, creativity, and relationships with others, the body is inscribed, forming the soul, which may be misconstrued (for instance, through a medical or Cartesian reformulation of events) but which can be seen as the site of ethical and spiritual thought

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Grant Gillett
University of Otago

Citations of this work

Bioethics and Literature: An Exciting Overlap.Grant Gillett & Lynne Bowyer - 2014 - Journal of Bioethical Inquiry 11 (2):135-136.

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References found in this work

A thousand plateaus: capitalism and schizophrenia.Gilles Deleuze - 1987 - London: Athlone Press. Edited by Félix Guattari.
The gay science.Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche - 1882 - New York,: Vintage Books. Edited by Walter Arnold Kaufmann.

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