Books > Humanities > Religion & beliefs > Non-Christian religions > Religions of Indic & Oriental origin > Buddhism
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Women in Early Indian Buddhism - Comparative Textual Studies (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R2,676
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Women in Early Indian Buddhism - Comparative Textual Studies (Hardcover)
Series: South Asia Research
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The path of practice as taught in ancient India by Gotama Buddha
was open to both women and men. The texts of early Indian Buddhism
show that women were lay followers of the Buddha and were also
granted the right to ordain and become nuns. Certain women were
known as influential teachers of men and women alike and considered
experts in certain aspects of Gotama's dhamma. For this to occur in
an ancient religion practiced within traditional societies is
really quite extraordinary. This is apparent especially in light of
the continued problems experienced by practitioners of many
religions today involved in challenging instilled norms and
practices and conferring the status of any high office upon women.
In this collection, Alice Collett brings together a sampling of the
plethora of Buddhist texts from early Indian Buddhism in which
women figure centrally. It is true that there are negative
conceptualizations of and attitudes towards women expressed in
early Buddhist texts, but for so many texts concerning women to
have been composed, collated and preserved is worthy of note. The
simple fact that the Buddhist textual record names so many nuns and
laywomen, and preserves biographies of them, attests to a
relatively positive situation for women at that time. With the
possible exception of the reverence accorded Egyptian queens, there
is no textual record of named women from an ancient civilization
that comes close to that of early Indian Buddhism. This volume
offers comparative study of texts in five different languages -
Gandhari, Pali, Sanskrit, Chinese and Sinhala. Each chapter is a
study and translation, with some chapters focusing more on
translation and some more on comparisons between parallel and
similar texts, whilst others are more discursive and thematic.
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