Editorial: Gender Asymmetry and Nuns’ Agency in the Asian Buddhist Traditions
1. Locating Gender Asymmetry
2. The Thorny Issue of Ordination
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
1 | This volume is a follow-up of a conference on ‘Gender Asymmetry in the Different Buddhist Traditions Through the Prism of Nuns’ Ordination and Education” held in May 2022 at the University of Perugia. I would like first and foremost to thank Ester Bianchi for hosting and co-organizing the conference with me. After a first stage had taken place in Paris (University of Nanterre) as part of the ANR project SHIFU, headed by Adeline Herrou, in January 2015, Esther Bianchi was as convinced as I was that it would be worthwhile to continue and widen the perspective by integrating even more Asian Buddhist traditions. I am also grateful to the Chiang Ching-kuo Foundation, who not only sponsored the conference in Perugia, but who kindly allowed us to postpone it several times due to COVID restrictions. Last but not least, I would like to thank all the conference participants and discussants who contributed to the conference and to this volume, bringing up many new ideas, stimulating comments and suggestions. |
2 | Other textualist approaches to the dearth of information on Buddhist nuns can be found, among others, in Schopen ([2012] 2014) and Langenberg (2020). |
3 | For example, in the autobiography of the nun Orgyan Chokyi (1675–1729), it is clearly stated that her master expressly forbade her to write her own life story (Schaeffer 2004). |
4 | In Tibet, nuns who have been ordained after marriage and childbearing are addressed by a particular term: genchö (rgan chos), literally an “elder” religious person, which is slightly pejorative because it implies a certain degree of impurity. |
5 | These elderly religious women in Mongolia have a similar status to that of the Tibetan genchö mentioned above. |
6 | |
7 | |
8 | By the way, in Tibetan Buddhism, many monks also chose not to be fully ordained, leading a monastic life either as upāsaka or śrāmaṇera. |
9 | |
10 | Something similar took place in Tibetan Buddhism after two groups of Karma-Kagyü nuns were fully ordained in Hong Kong, respectively in 1984 and 1987. After their return to India and a long-awaited audience with His Holiness the Dalai Lama, no solution could be found to integrate those new bhikṣunīs who had been ordained into a foreign lineage with its own rituals into the Tibetan saṃgha. The result is that only one out of the three surviving ethnically Tibetan nuns wished to be considered as a bhikṣunī (Personal communications August 2012). |
11 | Personal communication with Dhamma Vijaya (February 2022), a Theravāda nun. For more on the Theravāda movement in Nepal, see Gellner and LeVine (2007). |
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Schneider, N. Editorial: Gender Asymmetry and Nuns’ Agency in the Asian Buddhist Traditions. Religions 2023, 14, 285. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14020285
Schneider N. Editorial: Gender Asymmetry and Nuns’ Agency in the Asian Buddhist Traditions. Religions. 2023; 14(2):285. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14020285
Chicago/Turabian StyleSchneider, Nicola. 2023. "Editorial: Gender Asymmetry and Nuns’ Agency in the Asian Buddhist Traditions" Religions 14, no. 2: 285. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14020285
APA StyleSchneider, N. (2023). Editorial: Gender Asymmetry and Nuns’ Agency in the Asian Buddhist Traditions. Religions, 14(2), 285. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14020285