Women and Buddhism: Voices, Authority, and Transformation
MTA
Feminist histories and contemporary perspectives on gender, ordination, and leadership
2nd Edition
Women and Buddhism: Voices, Authority, and Transformation traces the enduring yet uneven presence of women in Buddhist communities from the Buddha’s time to the present, showing how they have acted as renunciants, teachers, patrons, scholars, ritual specialists, and leaders despite frequent institutional and cultural constraints. The book begins with the revolutionary establishment of the bhikkhuni order by Mahapajapati Gotami, illuminated by the Therigatha’s vivid verses of awakening, and examines how the Vinaya’s rules—including the Eight Garudhammas—shaped both opportunities and limitations for women’s monastic authority across Theravada, East Asian, Tibetan, and other traditions. It highlights the continuity of fully ordained nuns in China, Korea, Taiwan, and Vietnam under the Dharmaguptaka lineage, contrasted with the interrupted bhikkhuni lineages in Sri Lanka, Thailand, Cambodia, and Tibetan regions, where alternative forms of renunciancy (maechi, dasasilmata, anagarika, getsulma) persisted.
Contemporary chapters detail revival movements and leadership innovations: the reclamation of bhikkhuni ordination in Sri Lanka through transnational ordinations, the quiet but growing maechi and bhikkhuni presence in Thailand and Cambodia despite official bans, the flourishing of women’s leadership in Taiwan’s Humanistic Buddhism and China’s revitalized monasticism, Korea’s highly educated bhikkhuni Sangha driving education and social service, Japan’s Zen abbesses and lay teachers reshaping ritual authority, and Tibetan nuns’ groundbreaking attainment of the Geshema degree and ongoing debates about full bhikkhuni ordination. Diasporic Tibetan nuns in India, lay women’s merit economies in Southeast Asia, Western sanghas experimenting with egalitarian governance, feminist hermeneutics re‑reading canonical texts and Vinaya, digital platforms amplifying female voices, and women‑led ecological and social‑engagement initiatives illustrate how authority is being re‑defined beyond formal titles to include teaching, scholarship, caregiving, activism, and embodiment.
Throughout, an intersectional lens reveals how gender interacts with caste, class, race, migration, sexuality, and disability, exposing both hierarchies and pathways of refuge and empowerment. The book also addresses ethical crises of power and abuse, outlining safeguarding mechanisms, accountability structures, and the need for transparent policies, metrics, and inclusive governance. By weaving together historical recovery, ethnographic insight, philosophical critique, and practical roadmaps, the volume argues that Buddhist traditions can be transformed when women’s full spiritual, intellectual, and leadership capacities are recognized, ultimately enriching the Dharma for all beings.
This book is essential for Buddhist practitioners, monastics, and lay leaders seeking to understand and advance gender equity in their communities. It also serves scholars and students of Buddhism, gender studies, and religious studies who need comprehensive historical and contemporary analysis. Activists working for women's rights in religious contexts, policy makers within Buddhist institutions, and donors interested in funding equitable Buddhist initiatives will find valuable resources and frameworks for action.
May 23, 2026
37,935 words
2 hours 39 minutes
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