The third millennium started with a bang in Thai Buddhist circles when a former philosophy professor was ordained a Buddhist nun in Sri Lanka. The Thai Buddhist hierarchy does not recognize nuns, and has, in fact, forbidden monks to ordain women. Thailand accommodates some 300,WO Buddhist monks-and some 10,000 white-clad Buddhist women, called "mae chis". The social and spiritual status of these women has traditionally been extremely low and they are regarded as laywomen. In the English literature, they are confusingly called "nuns", hence the reluctance to use the same category for these newly ordained women. The traditional Sanskrit/Pali terms for ordained women are "bhiksuni" and "bhikkhuni", which are not well-known in Thailand, as thes...
Until recently, women in Theravada Buddhist countries have been barred from receiving higher ordina...
Based on extensive research in Sri Lanka and interviews with Theravada and Tibetan nuns from around ...
The first Chinese Buddhist nuns were ordained in the monks' community only, despite disciplinary gui...
In Thailand gender determines access to Buddhist ordination and women have never been granted member...
This anthropological thesis examines the complexity of the relationship between women's monasticism,...
Religion plays a central role in Thai society with Buddhism intertwined in the daily lives of the pe...
International audienceHow have Buddhist nuns in Myanmar engaged themselves in monastic relationships...
gives some important insight into the reasons for the Buddha’s hesitation to ordain women. The Buddh...
According to tradition, the first Buddhist nun ever to have been ordained was the Buddha’s stepmothe...
This article centers on the relationship of rules (nīti) to the monastic form of life of contemporar...
There is a general consensus amongst Buddhist scholars that institutional Buddhism, which is the mo...
This article investigates the recent manifestation of a number of Western Tibetan Buddhist nuns and ...
This article centers on the relationship of rules (<i>nīti</i>) to the monastic form of ...
This thesis concerns contemporary Thai bhikkhuni in society in relation to the laity, particularly l...
The importance of Abhidhamma (higher doctrine) in Myanmar Buddhist society is well known. However, i...
Until recently, women in Theravada Buddhist countries have been barred from receiving higher ordina...
Based on extensive research in Sri Lanka and interviews with Theravada and Tibetan nuns from around ...
The first Chinese Buddhist nuns were ordained in the monks' community only, despite disciplinary gui...
In Thailand gender determines access to Buddhist ordination and women have never been granted member...
This anthropological thesis examines the complexity of the relationship between women's monasticism,...
Religion plays a central role in Thai society with Buddhism intertwined in the daily lives of the pe...
International audienceHow have Buddhist nuns in Myanmar engaged themselves in monastic relationships...
gives some important insight into the reasons for the Buddha’s hesitation to ordain women. The Buddh...
According to tradition, the first Buddhist nun ever to have been ordained was the Buddha’s stepmothe...
This article centers on the relationship of rules (nīti) to the monastic form of life of contemporar...
There is a general consensus amongst Buddhist scholars that institutional Buddhism, which is the mo...
This article investigates the recent manifestation of a number of Western Tibetan Buddhist nuns and ...
This article centers on the relationship of rules (<i>nīti</i>) to the monastic form of ...
This thesis concerns contemporary Thai bhikkhuni in society in relation to the laity, particularly l...
The importance of Abhidhamma (higher doctrine) in Myanmar Buddhist society is well known. However, i...
Until recently, women in Theravada Buddhist countries have been barred from receiving higher ordina...
Based on extensive research in Sri Lanka and interviews with Theravada and Tibetan nuns from around ...
The first Chinese Buddhist nuns were ordained in the monks' community only, despite disciplinary gui...