In this presentation I raise the question of the value that entombed biographies hold for the study of Buddhist women given that, as a genre, these texts were commonly written by men whom historians typically identify as Confucian. I argue that rather than dismiss these invaluable biographies because they were written by elite men with limited access to institutional spaces demarcated for Buddhist women, that we instead adopt a methodology of reading that seriously considers the ways in which Confucian men wrote about the virtues of Buddhist women even when those women’s virtues ran counter to traditional Confucian ones. I draw from three case studies of such biographies written for women who served the Northern Wei court in Luoyang in the early 6th century to reveal how Buddhism provided Confucian authors with a mechanism for appraising the public works of women in a time of intense cultural reinvention.
Attached Paper
Annual Meeting 2024
Doing Women’s History With Male-Authored Sources: the Conundrum of Entombed Biographies (Muzhiming 墓誌銘) as Source Material for the Study of Buddhist Women
Abstract for Online Program Book (maximum 150 words)