Six-Eared Macaque


The Six-Eared Macaque is a major antagonist and one of the most powerful characters in Wu Cheng'en's fantasy novel Journey to the West, best remembered for closely impersonating Sun Wukong.

In ''Journey to the West''

The Six-Eared Macaque—and not to be mistaken for the Macaque King, one of the same Seven Sages Fraternity of Sworn Brothers, that Sun Wukong is a member of—is, according to the Buddha, one of the four spiritual primates that do not belong to any of the ten categories that all beings in the universe are classified under. The other three are the Intelligent Stone Monkey, Red-Buttock Baboon, and Interconnected-Arm Gibbon. Buddha also says that the Six-Eared Macaque is "near-omniscient", "knowledgeable of past and future" and "comprehensive of all things". As he and Sun Wukong are both spiritual primates, their powers and abilities are on par. Hoping to replace Sun Wukong and gain his rewards from the Buddha in Sun Wukong's place, the Six-Eared Macaque first appears in Xiliang in disguise as Sun Wukong. He knocks Tang Sanzang unconscious and steals the baggage and paperwork which he takes to Flower-Fruit Mountain to set up his own pilgrim band. He fights with the real Sun Wukong and neither is able to overcome his opponent. No one is able to differentiate between the real and the fake Sun Wukong—the Six-Eared Macaque's spell of impersonation is so good that he also responds to the "Headache Sutra", preventing the pilgrims from differentiating between him and Sun Wukong—until the two appear before the Buddha, who tells them about the four spiritual primates. The Six-Eared Macaque attempts to flee when he hears the Buddha speak about his true identity, but the Buddha traps him under a giant golden alms bowl. The macaque is then killed by Sun Wukong.

Interpretations

The Six-eared Macaque's name is a likely nod to the old saying that "a secret is not safe between six ears"; his name is also thought to be a nod towards the concept of Āyatana. The Six-eared Macaque is also thought to represent the double-mindedness/double-heartedness in Sun Wukong himself.
Hongmei Sun argues that Sun Wukong's killing of his peer, rival and doppelgänger is "self-contradiction to an extreme", especially since the Six-Eared Macaque has already been trapped by the Buddha which parallels Wukong's own capture in the novel's early chapters. To Wukong, the Six-Eared Macaque represents "the monster in him", "a self whose boundary has just been pinned down", and his elimination symbolizes Wukong's personal progress in achieving Buddhahood and freedom.
The story has also been interpreted in Buddhist terms. Chapter 58 is titled "Two Minds cause disturbance in the great universe..." and contains a poem that begins with "If one has two minds, disasters he'll breed". Monkey symbolizes the mind in Chinese Buddhism, and the two monkeys are likely metaphors for zhenxin and wangxin, being opposite yet indistinguishable—because they are, in fact, one. In this sense, killing Six-Eared Macaque in a swift blow enables Wukong to recognize "the true oneness", or tathātā, to his nature.
Hoong Teik Toh believes that this episode is derived from the Indian epic Ramayana but did not offer any evidence.

In other works

The Six-Eared Macaque is reincarnated in one of the earliest unofficial sequels to Xiyouji, the Ming dynasty Xu Xiyouji.