Preliminary Practices: Bloody Knees, Calloused Palms, and the Transformative Nature of Women’s Labor

In this article, I explore the prostration accumulation portion of the Preliminary Practices of a specific group of Tibetan Buddhist women in Bongwa Mayma, a rural area of Yushu Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture in Qinghai Province. I focus specifically on the nuns and lay women who utilize this set of...

Ausführliche Beschreibung

Gespeichert in:  
Bibliographische Detailangaben
1. VerfasserIn: Fitzgerald, Kati (VerfasserIn)
Medienart: Elektronisch Aufsatz
Sprache:Englisch
Verfügbarkeit prüfen: HBZ Gateway
Journals Online & Print:
Lade...
Fernleihe:Fernleihe für die Fachinformationsdienste
Veröffentlicht: MDPI [2020]
In: Religions
Jahr: 2020, Band: 11, Heft: 12
weitere Schlagwörter:B Women
B Amitabha
B Tibetan Buddhism
B Yushu Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture
B religious labor
B Buddhism
B Drikung Kagyu
B Nuns
B Preliminary Practices
B Qinghai
B lay women
B prostrations
Online Zugang: Volltext (doi)
Volltext (kostenfrei)

MARC

LEADER 00000caa a22000002 4500
001 1744676909
003 DE-627
005 20210127121832.0
007 cr uuu---uuuuu
008 210114s2020 xx |||||o 00| ||eng c
024 7 |a 10.3390/rel11120636  |2 doi 
035 |a (DE-627)1744676909 
035 |a (DE-599)KXP1744676909 
040 |a DE-627  |b ger  |c DE-627  |e rda 
041 |a eng 
084 |a 0  |2 ssgn 
100 1 |a Fitzgerald, Kati  |e VerfasserIn  |0 (orcid)0000-0001-5830-9594  |4 aut 
245 1 0 |a Preliminary Practices  |b Bloody Knees, Calloused Palms, and the Transformative Nature of Women’s Labor 
264 1 |c [2020] 
336 |a Text  |b txt  |2 rdacontent 
337 |a Computermedien  |b c  |2 rdamedia 
338 |a Online-Ressource  |b cr  |2 rdacarrier 
520 |a In this article, I explore the prostration accumulation portion of the Preliminary Practices of a specific group of Tibetan Buddhist women in Bongwa Mayma, a rural area of Yushu Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture in Qinghai Province. I focus specifically on the nuns and lay women who utilize this set of teachings and practices. The Preliminary Practices not only initiate practitioners into a specific tradition (that of the Drikung Kagyu and more specifically the Amitabha practices of this lineage), but also more fundamentally into Vajrayāna Buddhism as it is practiced in contemporary Tibet. Although monks and male lay practitioners in this region also tend to perform the same Preliminary Practices, I focus specifically on women because of their unique relationship with bodily labor. I begin this article with a discussion of the domestic and economic labor practices of contemporary Tibetan women in rural Yushu, followed by an analysis of Preliminary Practices as understood through the Preliminary Practice text and oral commentaries utilized by all interviewees and interviews (collected from 2016-2020) with female practitioners about their motivations, experiences, and realizations during the Refuge and prostration accumulation portion of their Preliminary Practices. Women themselves view bodily labor as a productive and inevitable aspect of life. On the one hand, women state openly that their domestic duties impede upon their ability to achieve religious realization. On the other, they frequently extol the virtues of hard work, perseverance, patience, and fortitude that their lives of labor helped them to cultivate. Prostration is meant to embody the act of going for Refuge, of submitting oneself to the teachings of the Buddha, to the path of the dharma, and to the community of religious practitioners with whom they will study and grow. Prostrations are meant to embody the extreme difficulty of Refuge, to remove obscurations, to crush the ego, and to confirm a dedication to endure the hardships on the path to realization. Buddhist women, despite their ambiguous relationship with physical labor, see the physical pain of this process as a transformative experience that allows them a glimpse of the spaciousness of mind and freedom from attachment-filled desire promised in the teachings they receive. 
601 |a Transformation 
650 4 |a Amitabha 
650 4 |a Buddhism 
650 4 |a Drikung Kagyu 
650 4 |a Preliminary Practices 
650 4 |a Qinghai 
650 4 |a Tibetan Buddhism 
650 4 |a Yushu Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture 
650 4 |a lay women 
650 4 |a Nuns 
650 4 |a prostrations 
650 4 |a religious labor 
650 4 |a Women 
773 0 8 |i Enthalten in  |t Religions  |d Basel : MDPI, 2010  |g 11(2020,12) Artikel 636  |h Online-Ressource  |w (DE-627)665435797  |w (DE-600)2620962-7  |w (DE-576)348219067  |x 2077-1444  |7 nnns 
773 1 8 |g volume:11  |g year:2020  |g number:12 
856 |u https://www.mdpi.com/2077-1444/11/12/636/pdf?version=1606382282  |x unpaywall  |z Vermutlich kostenfreier Zugang  |h publisher [oa journal (via doaj)] 
856 4 0 |u https://www.mdpi.com/2077-1444/11/12/636  |x Verlag  |z kostenfrei  |3 Volltext 
856 |u https://doi.org/10.3390/rel11120636  |x doi  |3 Volltext 
936 u w |d 11  |j 2020  |e 12  |y 11(2020,12) Artikel 636 
951 |a AR 
ELC |a 1 
LOK |0 000 xxxxxcx a22 zn 4500 
LOK |0 001 3836376334 
LOK |0 003 DE-627 
LOK |0 004 1744676909 
LOK |0 005 20210114115600 
LOK |0 008 210114||||||||||||||||ger||||||| 
LOK |0 040   |a DE-Tue135  |c DE-627  |d DE-Tue135 
LOK |0 092   |o n 
LOK |0 852   |a DE-Tue135 
LOK |0 852 1  |9 00 
LOK |0 935   |a ixzs  |a ixzo 
OAS |a 1 
ORI |a SA-MARC-ixtheoa001.raw 
REL |a 1 
SUB |a REL 
SYE 0 0 |a Tschinghai,Chinghai,Ch'ing-hai,Tsinghai,Qīnghǎi-Shěng,Qinghai sheng,Qinghaisheng,Kökenaγur,Kokonur