Women in Tibet

Couverture
Janet Gyatso, Hanna Havnevik
Columbia University Press, 2005 - 436 pages
Filling a gap in the literature, this volume explores the struggles and accomplishments of women from both past and present-day Tibet. Here are queens from the imperial period, yoginis and religious teachers of medieval times, Buddhist nuns, oracles, political workers, medical doctors, and performing artists. Most of the essays focus on the lives of individual women, whether from textual sources or from anthropological data, and show that Tibetan women have apparently enjoyed more freedom than women in many other Asian countries. The book is innovative in resisting both romanticization and hypercriticism of women's status in Tibetan society, attending rather to historical description, and to the question of what is distinctive about women's situations in Tibet, and what is common to both men and women in Tibetan society.

À propos de l'auteur (2005)

Janet Gyatso isprofessor of Buddhist Studies at Harvard University. She is the author of Being Human in a Buddhist World: An Intellectual History of Medicine in Early Modern Tibet(Columbia University Press, 2015), Women in Tibet: Past and Present (Columbia University Press, 2006), and others.

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