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Himalayan Hermitess is a vivid account of the life and times of a Buddhist nun
living on the borderlands of Tibetan culture. Orgyan Chokyi (1675-1729) spent
her life in Dolpo, the highest inhabited region of the Nepal Himalayas.
Illiterate and expressly forbidden by her master to write her own life story,
Orgyan Chokyi received divine inspiration, defied tradition, and composed one
of the most engaging autobiographies of the Tibetan literary tradition.
The Life of Orgyan Chokyi is the oldest known autobiography authored
by a Tibetan woman, and thus holds a critical place in both Tibetan
and Buddhist literature. In it she tells of the sufferings of her youth,
the struggle to escape menial labor and become a hermitess, her dreams and
visionary experiences, her relationships with other nuns, the painstaking
work of contemplative practice, and her hard-won social autonomy and
high-mountain solitude. In process it develops a compelling vision of the
relation between gender, the body, and suffering from a female Buddhist
practitioner's perspective.
Part One of Himalayan Hermitess presents a religious history of Orgyan Chokyi's
Himalayan world, the Life of Orgyan Chokyi as a work of literature,
its portrayal of sorrow and joy, its perspectives on suffering and
gender, as well as the diverse religious practices found throughout
the work. Part Two offers a full translation of the Life of Orgyan
Chokyi. Based almost entirely upon Tibetan documents never before
translated, Himalayan Hermitess is an accessible introduction to Buddhism
in the premodern Himalayas.
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