Buddhist Nuns and Gendered Practice
In Search of the Female Renunciant
Nirmala S. Salgado
Reviews and Awards
"A good corrective to much scholarship on the practices and lives of Buddhist nuns and therefore deserves serious attention by all scholars of Buddhism." --CHOICE
"This brilliant and unsettling work enjoins us to think the 'everyday life' of Buddhist female renunciants in Sri Lanka without translating it into the 'globalatinized' language of our gendered politics. After reading this work, we can no longer arbitrate 'third world' questions of gender, renunciation, religious existence, law, and secularism in the same way." --Ananda Abeysekara, author of The Politics of Postsecular Religion: Mourning Secular Futures
"In my view this is the most interesting and important recent study of Buddhist nuns. Salgado frames the multiple voices of nuns within their own lived existence and shows that from a cross-Buddhist viewpoint the many nuns living in our contemporary world do not have to carry the burden of uniformity." --Gananath Obeyesekere, Professor of Anthropology, Emeritus, Princeton University
"The strength of Salgado's admirably rigorous and comprehensive book lies in how she questions the conceptual vocabulary of post-Christian secular modernity that organizes liberal feminist translations and interpretations of the practices of Buddhist nuns. This is an important and accessible work that presents a timely and very necessary engagement with postcolonial theory for the study of religion." --Ruth Mas, Assistant Professor of Critical Theory and Contemporary Islam, University of Colorado, Boulder