Based on new translations of Pali texts and rare sources, Lives of Early Buddhist Nuns analyzes the portrayal of women in the Pali canon and commentaries. Focusing on the differences between canonical and commentarial literature, the author goes beyond the practice of using the commentaries to merely enhance the understanding of the Pali canon; she emphasizes the differing social and historical milieus out of which these genres of literature were born. Assessing each genre on its own terms, the work demonstrates that the Pali canon, contrary to how it has been presented previously, is more favorable to women.
The first part of the volume contains biographies of the six best-known Buddhist nuns who were considered to have been direct disciples of the Buddha. These biographies throw light on gender relations as they evolved in the early centuries of Buddhism in India. The life stories also serve as the foundation for discussion of Buddhist women in the second part. From notions of beauty and adornment to family, class, and marriage, various themes in the biographies are explored in this work, and through this exploration the changing form of Buddhism in early India is captured..
Lives of Early Buddhist Nuns: Biographies as History, Alice Collett, Oxford University Press India, Hardcover, 2016, 275 pp, $40.00
ALICE COLLETT is an academic who specializes in women in Indian Buddhism. Her books include the edited volume Women in Early Indian Buddhism: Comparative Textual Studies (2013) and the monograph, Lives of Early Buddhist Nuns: Biographies as History (2016). She is currently working on her fifth book, entitled Women in Early Historic India: The Changing Political Landscape. She has worked at several universities around the world � in North America, Europe and Asia, and is currently Director of the South Asia History Project, United Kingdom.
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Contents
Foreword by Jonathan S. Walters
Acknowledgements
List of abbreviations
General introduction
Part one: P=ali biographies
Introduction
1. Dhammadinn=a
2. Khem=a
3. Kis=agotami
4. Pa=ac=ar=a
5. Bhadd=a Kualakes=a
6. Uppalava=a
Part two: Themes and issues
7. Female teachers: Dhammadinn=a
8. Female beauty: Khem=a
9. Female wanderers: Kis=agotami
10. Family, marriage, and class: Pa=ac=ar=a
11. Female conversion: Bhadd=a Kualakes=a
12. Female characteristics: Uppalava=a
Conclusion
Afterword by Martin Seeger
Glossary
Bibliography
Index
About the author
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