Scholars have observed that Korean Buddhist nuns have a relatively high social status compared to nuns of other Asian countries, much like their sisters in Taiwan. It is a source of great pride for many Korean bhikṣuṇīs that their community operates with a high degree of autonomy, bringing them to an almost equal standing with their male counterparts. However, this claim of equal status is challenged once the nuns step outside their own communities and into the hierarchical system of the Order, an institution dominated by male monastics. This paper aims to report on the gender disparity between male monastics and Buddhist women, both nuns and laywomen alike. I will first explore Korean Buddhist nuns’ experiences of gender discrimination imp...
This paper explores how lay female believers are depicted in the Chinese monastic Pure Land Buddhist...
When we look specifically at Buddhist doctrine, the question of whether it has achieved gender equal...
Medieval Japan was a fluid society in which many wanderers, including religious preachers, traveled ...
Scholars have observed that Korean Buddhist nuns have a relatively high social status compared to nu...
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 ...
In Thailand gender determines access to Buddhist ordination and women have never been granted member...
Religion plays a central role in Thai society with Buddhism intertwined in the daily lives of the pe...
This paper explores apparent contradictions in the gender identifications of Taiwanese Buddhist nuns...
This chapter demonstrates that Taiwanese Buddhist nuns resist the limitations of traditional Han gen...
This thesis explores the relationship between gender and Buddhism as it applies to conceptions of fe...
In the past and present the inter-gender relationship has been based on male domination resulting in...
This anthropological thesis examines the complexity of the relationship between women's monasticism,...
In 2001, during an academic conference on Humanistic Buddhism in Taipei, Venerable Shi Zhaohui, acco...
The debate on the woman question in Korea can be observed to have its beginnings when Korea was unde...
This paper explores how lay female believers are depicted in the Chinese monastic Pure Land Buddhist...
When we look specifically at Buddhist doctrine, the question of whether it has achieved gender equal...
Medieval Japan was a fluid society in which many wanderers, including religious preachers, traveled ...
Scholars have observed that Korean Buddhist nuns have a relatively high social status compared to nu...
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 ...
In Thailand gender determines access to Buddhist ordination and women have never been granted member...
Religion plays a central role in Thai society with Buddhism intertwined in the daily lives of the pe...
This paper explores apparent contradictions in the gender identifications of Taiwanese Buddhist nuns...
This chapter demonstrates that Taiwanese Buddhist nuns resist the limitations of traditional Han gen...
This thesis explores the relationship between gender and Buddhism as it applies to conceptions of fe...
In the past and present the inter-gender relationship has been based on male domination resulting in...
This anthropological thesis examines the complexity of the relationship between women's monasticism,...
In 2001, during an academic conference on Humanistic Buddhism in Taipei, Venerable Shi Zhaohui, acco...
The debate on the woman question in Korea can be observed to have its beginnings when Korea was unde...
This paper explores how lay female believers are depicted in the Chinese monastic Pure Land Buddhist...
When we look specifically at Buddhist doctrine, the question of whether it has achieved gender equal...
Medieval Japan was a fluid society in which many wanderers, including religious preachers, traveled ...