Dear Dr. Karp,
There is some information on removing human urine and excrement from monastery floors in
volume 1, pp. 150 and 168 of
Karashima, Seishi, trans. 2012. Die Abhisamācārikā Dharmāḥ: Verhaltensregen für
buddhistische Mönche der Mahāsāṃghika-Lokottaravādins. 3 vols. Tokyo: The
International Research Institute for Advanced Buddhology.
One thing I found very interesting there is that human excrement is perceived as
defiling, but cow excrement is perceived as purifying (it is actually recommended
for cleaning the floor).
This book may also be useful to you:
Heirman, Ann and Mathieu Torck. 2012. A Pure Mind in a Clean Body: Bodily Care in
the Buddhist Monasteries of Ancient India and China. Gent: Academia Press.
I also have a chapter in my dissertation (chapter 4) on Buddhist lavatory protocol:
Handy, Christopher Aaron. 2016. “"Indian Buddhist Etiquette and the Emergence of Ascetic Civility.” Ph.D.
Diss. McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario.
https://macsphere.mcmaster.ca/handle/11375/20471
Best wishes,
Chris Handy
On 7/10/17 6:49 AM, Artur Karp via INDOLOGY wrote:
> monograph
paper or monograph
2017-07-10 9:25 GMT+02:00 Artur Karp <karp@uw.edu.pl>:
Dear List,
is there any monograph devoted to the techniques of cleansing monasteries and - especially - of the removal of fecal matter?
Respectfully,
Artur Karp (ret.)Chair of South Asian StudiesUniversity of WarsawPolska
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-- Christopher Handy PhD in Religious Studies (McMaster, 2016)
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