Sexual aspects of Gu venom

Gu illness resulted from a contamination by gu poison, which a recent analyst has characterized as “an alien evil spirit which entered [the] body and developed into worms or some similar animal that gnawed away at the intestines or genitalia.” This poison was thought to be picked up in damp and humid wetlands, and after a considerable incubation period, it would cause severe symptoms, including derangement and debauchery, ending in death. …As it turns out, the gu itself was produced from the sexual secretions of men and women engaged in lascivious and incestuous intercourse, or from the similar secretions of various insects and animals purposely cultivated by a person with the intention of poisoning another. These and other accounts point to an origin of gu in an abnormal and degenerate intensification of the emotions, and N. H. van Straten has persuasively argued for a connection with the transgression of taboos on sexuality and aggression: This gu poison and various related aspects can be considered to represent an intensified materialization of the various notions which centered on fear of the instincts as causes of disorder. In theory this disorder was believed to be the natural concomitant of disturbed sexual relationships and the overt expression of aggression that had been dormant for a long time. In practice this meant the repression of the instincts in order to cut out potential sexual and social conflicts; and the psychological problems that arose from this demand are concreted in the concepts of gu poison.

Davis, Edward L. Society and the supernatural in Song China. 2001 University of Hawai‘i Press. P. 90

jinuo book

Last posts

Sunset in Dali

Sunset in Dali

No Words Fuxing Rd from the South Gate. Dali, Yunnan.Corner in Fuxing Rd, Dali, Yunnan.Night market at the south of the South Gate. Dali. YunnanLast posts

The Local Lords cult of the Bai nationality

The Local Lords cult of the Bai nationality

The worship of the Local Lords (benzhu) is the most characteristic of the Bai people. Their religious life revolves around the Benzhu temple of each village, as each village venerates a local lord, sometimes a historical figure who sacrificed for the people. In other...

Pin It on Pinterest