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Book Cover
Book
Author Klein, Anne C., 1947-

Title Meeting the Great Bliss Queen : Buddhists, feminists, and the art of the self / Anne Carolyn Klein
Published Boston : Beacon Press, [1995]
©1995

Copies

Location Call no. Vol. Availability
 W'PONDS  294.3378344 Kle/Mtg  AVAILABLE
 MELB  294.3378344 Kle/Mtg  AVAILABLE
Description xviii, 307 pages : illustrations ; 23 cm
Contents I. Terms of the Discussion -- 1. Introduction: Opening the Conversation and Meeting the Great Bliss Queen. 2. Persons: Then and Now, Here and There -- II. Practice and Theory. 3. Mindfulness and Subjectivity. 4. Gain or Drain? Compassion and the Self-Other Boundary. 5. Self: One Exists, the Other Doesn't -- III. Women and the Great Bliss Queen. 6. Nondualism and the Great Bliss Queen. 7. Becoming the Great Bliss Queen: Her Ritual -- 8. Inconclusion
Summary How can women discover who they are? Do all women share certain essential qualities? Can people change themselves in fundamental ways? Or are our identities primarily shaped by environment, to be changed only from without? Of the many women searching for answers to these questions, relatively few have turned to Buddhism for insight. Yet, similar debates are central to traditional Buddhist thought. Is enlightenment already present in everyone, Buddhists ask, merely awaiting discovery? Or can it be developed only through cultivation of certain qualities?
In this groundbreaking work, Anne Klein becomes the first scholar to put Buddhist and feminist thoughts on identity in conversation with each other. Despite the daunting barriers of geography, language, and culture that separate them, Buddhism and contemporary feminism have much to say to each other. Buddhist practices such as mindfulness - in which calm centering and keen awareness of change coexist - and compassion - in which the self is recognized as both powerful in itself and interdependently connected with all others - can be important resources for contemporary Western women. Likewise, feminism can expand the traditional horizons of Buddhist concerns to include social, historical, and psychological issues. The image and ritual of the Great Bliss Queen, an important Buddhist figure of enlightenment, form the unifying image of the book, modeling the practices and theory that can assist each of us in being at one with ourselves as well as fully open to engagement with others
Notes Index: p. 303-307
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index
Subject Ye-shes-mtsho-rgyal, active 8th century.
Buddhism -- Social aspects -- China -- Tibet Autonomous Region.
Women -- Religious aspects -- Buddhism.
Women (Buddhism)
Feminism -- Religious aspects -- Buddhism.
LC no. 94007678
ISBN 0807073075 paperback
0807073067 cloth