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OverviewThe 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. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Alice Collett (Lecturer in Religious Studies, Lecturer in Religious Studies, Department of Theology and Religious Studies, York St John University, York, UK)Publisher: Oxford University Press Inc Imprint: Oxford University Press Inc Dimensions: Width: 23.90cm , Height: 2.50cm , Length: 16.30cm Weight: 0.499kg ISBN: 9780199326044ISBN 10: 0199326045 Pages: 288 Publication Date: 31 October 2013 Audience: College/higher education , Undergraduate , Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: To order ![]() Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us. Table of ContentsContents Contributors A Note on Non-English Words Abbreviations Introduction Chapter 1-The Bajaur Collection of Kharosthi Manuscripts Mahaprajapati Gautami and the Order of Nuns in a Gandharan Version of the Daksinavibhangasutra Chapter 2-The British Library Kharosthi Fragments Behind the Birch Bark Curtain Chapter 3 Pali Vinaya Re-conceptualizing Female Sexuality in Early Buddhism Chapter 4 Mahasamghika-Lokottaravada Bhiksuni Vinaya The Intersection of Womanly Virtue and Buddhist Asceticism Chapter 5 Anguttara-nikaya / Ekottarika-agama Outstanding Bhikkhunis in the Ekottarika-agama Chapter 6 Samyutta-nikya / Samyukta-agama Defying Mara - Bhikkhunis in the Samyukta-agama Chapter 7 Therigatha Nanda, Female Sibling of the Buddha Chapter 8 Apadana: Theri-Apadana Wives of the Saints: Marriage and Kamma in the Path to Arahantship Chapter 9 Avadanasataka The Role of Brahmanical Marriage in a Buddhist Text Chapter 10 Dhammapada- atthakatha/Saddharmaratnavaliya Women in Medieval South Asian Buddhist Societies BibliographyReviewsNot only is Women in Early Indian Buddhism interesting from the point of view of an in-depth analysis of women in early Buddhism, it is an engaging and informative glimpse into the benefits of thorough textual analysis. * Vajratara, Western Buddhist Review * Not only is Women in Early Indian Buddhism interesting from the point of view of an in-depth analysis of women in early Buddhism, it is an engaging and informative glimpse into the benefits of thorough textual analysis. Vajratara, Western Buddhist Review Author InformationAlice Collett is a Fellow of the Arts and Humanities Council of Great Britain (AHRC) and Lecturer at York St John University. She has worked in different universities in North America and the UK, and published several articles on women in early Indian Buddhism, including two which look at reception history and review the modern scholarly debate on the subject. She is currently working on a monograph entitled Pali Biographies of Buddhist Nuns, for which she is in receipt of an Arts and Humanities Research Council award. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |