Reprint

Gender Asymmetry and Nuns’ Agency in the Asian Buddhist Traditions

Edited by
December 2023
250 pages
  • ISBN978-3-0365-9825-3 (Hardback)
  • ISBN978-3-0365-9826-0 (PDF)

This book is a reprint of the Special Issue Gender Asymmetry and Nuns’ Agency in the Asian Buddhist Traditions that was published in

Social Sciences, Arts & Humanities
Summary

In Buddhist monasticism, women are relegated to second rank, mainly for two reasons: first, they do not always have access to the same level of education as their male counterparts and are therefore not credited with the same learning (erudition); second, in some countries, they are excluded from one or all ordination rites. Thus, we have, on the one hand, full-fledged monks, and on the other, female religious practitioners who, in several Asian countries, are not ordained (Burma, Sri Lanka and Thailand) or are only semi-ordained (India, Mongolia, Nepal and Tibet). As for Chinese and Korean monasticisms, there are fully ordained nuns, but they still have to respect traditional norms regarding gender hierarchy. The resulting asymmetry between ordained men and women is a facet of living Buddhism. However, in recent decades, Buddhist nuns are also taking steps to resolve some of the discrimination they face, thereby showing their agency.

Format
  • Hardback
License
© 2022 by the authors; CC BY-NC-ND license
Keywords
Tibetan Buddhist nuns; Tibetan female monasticism; Tibetan Buddhism; monastic education; geshe degree; gender asymmetry; contemporary Taiwanese Buddhism; nuns; gender; monastic education; bhikṣuṇīs’ identities; Buddhist nuns; full ordination; Vinaya; gender asymmetry; Cambodian Buddhism; Buddhist nuns; filial piety; gratitude, ṭūn jī/doun chi; upāsikā; Dual Ordination; erbuseng jie 二部僧戒; bhikṣuṇī ordination; Longlian 隆蓮; Tongyuan 通願; Chinese Buddhist bhikṣuīs; Buddhist monasticism; Longlian; Tongyuan; Rurui; ordination procedures; dual ordination; Śikṣamāā ordination; contemporary China; Buddhist education; Buddhist academies; foxueyuan 佛学院; Dajinshan 大金山; Buddhist academy for nuns 尼众佛学院; Tibetan hagiographies; Tibetan women; full female ordination; mae chis; Thai female monasticism; Vinaya; Thai Theravada Buddhism; Thai Buddhist nunneries; history of Thai Buddhism; cremation volumes; monastic code texts; Buddhist revival movement; Buddhist nuns; monastic status; Vietnam; Buddhism; Theravāda; Burma; Myanmar; nuns; bhikkhunī; Gender; meditation; vipassanā; Pāli; gender; Korean Buddhism; monastic order; constitution; bhikṣuṇī; lay women; n/a