Academic literature on the topic 'Buddhist monasticism and religious orders for women Vietnam'

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Journal articles on the topic "Buddhist monasticism and religious orders for women Vietnam"

1

Ulanov, Mergen. "Buddhism in the Feminist Context: Historical Experience and Modern Discourse." Logos et Praxis, no. 2 (September 2019): 14–23. http://dx.doi.org/10.15688/lp.jvolsu.2019.2.2.

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The author considers the problems of women's place in Buddhist culture in the context of feminist discourse. He notes that Buddhism is distinguished by a tolerant and respectful attitude to the female. Buddhism admits that women, along with men, are able to achieve enlightenment and find Nirvana. However, the relationship between male and female monastic orders in Buddhism was not fully equal. The order of nuns was considered to be the youngest in comparison with the order of monks, and the rules restricting the behavior of the nuns were more than for the monks, which was probably a forced step aimed at taking into account the realities of society. Despite this, the Foundation of the women's monastic organization, which opened the way for women to religious knowledge and spiritual rank, was in its essence a radical social revolution for that time. The emergence of the female monastic community was an example of a fundamentally new view of women and their position in society. With the release of Buddhism outside India female monasticism became widespread in many Asian countries. Later, however, in the countries of South, South-East Asia and Tibet, the Institute of full female monasticism disappeared. In the second half of the twentieth century the attempts to revive the Institute that have led to the emergence of the phenomenon of neonuns. As a result of the spread of Buddhism in the West, it was included in the field of gender studies and feminist discourse. The question of equality between women and men in Buddhism has been actively developed by Western female Buddhists in the feminist discourse, that has formed a statement about the original equality of the sexes in Buddhism. The theme of the status of women in society and their rights has become an important part of the social concept of Western Buddhism. The result was the emergence of the international women's Buddhist Association "Sakyadhita".
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Books on the topic "Buddhist monasticism and religious orders for women Vietnam"

1

Paññāvaṃsa. Mi thveʺ toʻ Gotamī nhaṅʻʹ bhikkhunī sāsanā. Ranʻ kunʻ: Sāsanā reʺ Vanʻkrīʺ Ṭhāna, 2000.

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Bhikṣuṇī vaṃśaya =: Bhikshuni vansaya. Anurādhapuraya: Guṇaśekara saha Samāgama, 1992.

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Songs and lives of the jomo (Nuns) of Kinnaur, Northwest India: Women's religious expression in Tibetan Buddhism. Delhi: Sri Satguru Publications, 2008.

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4

Sisters in solitude: Two traditions of Buddhist monastic ethics for women : a comparative analysis of the Chinese Dharmagupta and the Tibetan Mūlāsarvāstivada Bhikṣuṇī Prātimokṣa sūtras. Albany: State University of New York Press, 1996.

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1950-, Thubten Chodron, ed. Blossoms of the dharma: Living as a Buddhist nun. Berkeley, Calif: North Atlantic Books, 1999.

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Sakyadhita International Conference on Buddhist Women (8th 2004 Seoul, Korea). Out of the shadows: Socially engaged Buddhist women. Delhi: Sri Satguru Publications, a division of Indian Books Centre, 2006.

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Kabilsingh, Chatsumarn. Kānsưksā phratraipidok phư̄a čhattham khūmư̄ kānfưk ʻoprom sattrī phūnam Chāophut. Krung Thēp: Rōngphim Mahāwitthayālai Thammasāt, 1995.

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International Conference on Buddhist Nuns (1987 : Buddh Gaya, India), ed. Sakyadhītā, daughters of the Buddha. Ithaca, N.Y: Snow Lion Publications, 1988.

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Sīri. Mranʻ mā praññʻ Sīla rhaṅʻ Cā saṇʻ tuikʻ myāʺ. Pu lai mruiʹ (3), Maṅgalā duṃ, Ranʻ kunʻ: Khyui teʺ saṃ Cā pe, 2006.

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Adielé, Faith, and Faith Adielé. Meeting Faith: The forest journals of a black Buddhist nun. New York: W. W. Norton & Co., 2004.

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