Tibetan Buddhist Metaphors and Models of Motherhood

Motherhood is at the core of the central Buddhist metaphor for how we should treat one another. And yet within Buddhist texts there remains a deeply gendered chasm between the universalized Buddhist call to love all beings as if they were our mothers, an ideal embodied most often by male renunciates...

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Bibliographische Detailangaben
1. VerfasserIn: Jacoby, Sarah (VerfasserIn)
Medienart: Elektronisch Aufsatz
Sprache:Englisch
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Veröffentlicht: Indiana University Press [2021]
In: Journal of feminist studies in religion
Jahr: 2021, Band: 37, Heft: 1, Seiten: 45-62
normierte Schlagwort(-folgen):B Bde-baʾi-rdo-rje 1892-1940 / Autobiografische Literatur / Tibetischer Buddhismus / Religiöse Literatur / Mutter / Metapher / Mutterschaft / Frau / Körper
RelBib Classification:AD Religionssoziologie; Religionspolitik
AG Religiöses Leben; materielle Religion
BL Buddhismus
KBM Asien
weitere Schlagwörter:B Tibetan Buddhism
B Motherhood
B women's spiritual autobiography
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Beschreibung
Zusammenfassung:Motherhood is at the core of the central Buddhist metaphor for how we should treat one another. And yet within Buddhist texts there remains a deeply gendered chasm between the universalized Buddhist call to love all beings as if they were our mothers, an ideal embodied most often by male renunciates, and the intensely particular affections involved with actual mothering, an everyday activity most often embodied by female householders. In this article, the author takes a fresh look at the tension between the valorized mother metaphor and its ambivalent referent through a perspective rarely foregrounded in Buddhist sources or their scholarly interpretations: that of a Tibetan Buddhist adept who was herself a mother. Jacoby traces the ways that the life narrative written by Sera Khandro Dewé Dorjé (1892-1940) moves within the space between as if and actual motherhood, presenting a gynocentric view of the female body as the locus of both.
ISSN:1553-3913
Enthält:Enthalten in: Journal of feminist studies in religion
Persistent identifiers:DOI: 10.2979/jfemistudreli.37.1.04