Join Books.org — it's free

Women's Studies, Religious Inspiration, General & Miscellaneous Religion, Buddhism, Inspiration
New Zen for Women by Perle Besserman — book cover

New Zen for Women

by Perle Besserman
Write a review
Log in to track your reading progress.

Overview


Perle Besserman's adventures in a Japanese Zen monastery provide the groundwork for this lively, heartwarming narrative of a woman's life in Zen. Engaging in cross-cultural dialogues with nuns and laywomen in India, China, Japan, and more, Besserman dispels the notion that women had nothing to do with the founding and sustaining of Zen. She shows how women continue to transform traditional Zen in new and creative ways, integrating the practice of meditation into their lives. Both informative and entertaining, A New Zen for Women offers a new look at Western women encountering Zen.

Synopsis

Perle Besserman's adventures in a Japanese Zen monastery provide the groundwork for this lively, heartwarming narrative of a woman's life in Zen. Engaging in cross-cultural dialogues with nuns and laywomen in India, China, Japan, and more, Besserman dispels the notion that women had nothing to do with the founding and sustaining of Zen. She shows how women continue to transform traditional Zen in new and creative ways, integrating the practice of meditation into their lives. Both informative and entertaining, A New Zen for Women offers a new look at Western women encountering Zen.

Publishers Weekly

Zen Buddhist teacher and author Besserman hangs a load of dirty laundry in this book, both a memoir of her training years and an argument for a new and improved Zen that accommodates the unique strengths of women. The memoir part is a page-turning account of the time she spent-exactly how long is unclear-in London and in a Japanese monastery with her teacher, a highly placed roshi. The latter is portrayed as an autocratic, sexist, arbitrary, perfidious and nasty creep. Besserman in turn comes across as a woman scorned by a substitute for her overcritical father. She slugs her teacher when he speaks heartlessly about a woman whom she believes he has impregnated. Buddhism has certainly had its share-maybe more than its share-of personally outrageous teachers. But Besserman selectively stacks the deck against this one in a crusade for justice for women in Buddhism. That subject is important and alive, and Besserman is admirably familiar with the growing literature of women confronting and wrestling with yet another historically patriarchal wisdom tradition. But contrary to the publisher's description, she has written not a "heartwarming narrative of a woman's life in Zen" but an unloading of old wrongs. Other books on women and Buddhism-Sallie Tisdale's, for example-offer more spacious and gracious correction. (Apr.)

Copyright 2007 Reed Business Information

About the Author, Perle Besserman

Perle Besserman is the author of several classics on meditation, the Kabbalah, Jewish mysticism, and women and spirituality, including Grassroots Zen. She is a contributor to 13th Moon, Lilith, and East West, and is the recipient of the Theodore Hoepfner Fiction Award. She is co-leader of the Princeton Area Zen Group, and is Emerita Professor at Illinois State University.

Reviews

There are no reviews yet. Log in to write one.

Editorials

From the Publisher


"Candid, courageous, and eloquent…Weaving together personal narrative, theory, history, and Zen practice, Besserman crafts a refreshingly new and riveting approach that is challenging, critical, and truly inspiring."--Elizabeth A. Kelly, DePaul University

Publishers Weekly

Zen Buddhist teacher and author Besserman hangs a load of dirty laundry in this book, both a memoir of her training years and an argument for a new and improved Zen that accommodates the unique strengths of women. The memoir part is a page-turning account of the time she spent—exactly how long is unclear—in London and in a Japanese monastery with her teacher, a highly placed roshi. The latter is portrayed as an autocratic, sexist, arbitrary, perfidious and nasty creep. Besserman in turn comes across as a woman scorned by a substitute for her overcritical father. She slugs her teacher when he speaks heartlessly about a woman whom she believes he has impregnated. Buddhism has certainly had its share—maybe more than its share—of personally outrageous teachers. But Besserman selectively stacks the deck against this one in a crusade for justice for women in Buddhism. That subject is important and alive, and Besserman is admirably familiar with the growing literature of women confronting and wrestling with yet another historically patriarchal wisdom tradition. But contrary to the publisher's description, she has written not a "heartwarming narrative of a woman's life in Zen" but an unloading of old wrongs. Other books on women and Buddhism—Sallie Tisdale's, for example—offer more spacious and gracious correction. (Apr.)

Copyright 2007 Reed Business Information

Library Journal

Part memoir, part crusade to find women a better place in Buddhism.


—Graham Christian

Book Details

Published
April 1, 2007
Publisher
Palgrave Macmillan
Pages
240
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9781403972149

More by Perle Besserman

Similar books