Which Character Betrays Sun Wukong In Journey To The West?

2025-08-31 02:59:37 259

3 Answers

Piper
Piper
2025-09-01 23:22:10
My take is a bit blunt: the White Bone Demon (Baigujing) sets the trap, but Tang Sanzang’s refusal to trust Sun Wukong amounts to the actual betrayal. In that arc of 'Journey to the West' the demon disguises herself multiple times; Wukong recognizes the ruse and kills her incarnations, while the monk sees only corpses and insists his disciple is cruel. I always felt sympathy for Wukong there—he gets punished for being the only one who can see the truth.

There are other moments in the novel that feel like betrayals too: the Heavenly Court’s cynicism, Buddha’s heavy-handed punishment early on, and even occasional sniping from Zhu Bajie. But emotionally, the hurt that cuts deepest is when the person Wukong serves most — his master — turns on him because of a lie. It’s a reminder that betrayal isn’t always malevolent; sometimes it’s born of fear and misunderstanding, which makes it all the more tragic.
Emma
Emma
2025-09-04 07:43:53
If I had to point to a single character who betrays Sun Wukong in 'Journey to the West', I'd name the White Bone Demon first, but the real sting comes from Tang Sanzang's reaction. Baigujing is the active agent: she uses illusions to take innocent forms and lures the monk into blaming Wukong for murder. Wukong acts to protect the group, but Sanzang, unable to see through the disguises, believes the wrong person and expels his protector.

I've always seen this episode as one of the book's sharpest critiques of blind piety and misplaced compassion. Tang Sanzang isn't malicious—he's earnest and fearful of sin—but that very earnestness makes him a kind of traitor to Wukong in practice. The dynamic also highlights a recurring motif: heroes who protect others are often punished by those they're protecting. That’s why later reconciliations and trials feel earned; Wukong's loyalty is tested not just by demons but by human mistrust.

So yes: the villain technically is the White Bone Demon, but the practical betrayal comes from Tang Sanzang when he chooses belief in appearances over his disciple's proven reliability. It’s painful, messy, and one of the best examples of the novel’s moral complexity.
Tessa
Tessa
2025-09-04 19:40:51
I still get a little salty whenever I think about the White Bone Demon arc in 'Journey to the West' — that stretch always made me want to shake someone. The short version is: the White Bone Demon (Baigujing) is the direct trickster who repeatedly disguises herself as an innocent woman, an old man, and a child to lure Tang Sanzang. Sun Wukong sees through the disguises and kills the demon’s incarnations to protect the pilgrimage, but Tang Sanzang only sees corpses and, horrified, concludes Wukong is a monster. He expels or imprisons Wukong for a while, effectively betraying his most powerful protector by trusting appearances over his own disciple’s judgment.

What I find fascinating is how layered that “betrayal” is. Baigujing is the active deceiver; she engineers the rift. Tang Sanzang is the tragic betrayer because his compassion and naiveté make him susceptible to the deception and cause him to turn against Wukong. And, if you zoom out, you can even argue the Heavenly Court and bureaucracy in earlier chapters betrayed Wukong by giving him empty honors and then trying to punish him rather than address his grievances—so the theme of betrayal recurs in different forms.

I keep coming back to that scene because it shows why 'Journey to the West' isn't just a monster-of-the-week tale; it’s about trust, misunderstanding, and the cost of rigid morality. Whenever I re-read it I find new small signs that Tang Sanzang’s anger is less about justice and more about fear of what his followers might think — which makes the whole thing feel painfully human.
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3 Answers2025-08-25 09:31:50
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