Good Wives, Family Protectors: Writing Jain Laywomen's Memorials

While Jain religious models of virtue articulate the renouncer as the focus of virtue, Jains likewise participate in the western Indian discourse of women's virtue, which centers around the dedicated wife (pativratā) and the virtuous woman (satī). The parole of virtue in Jain dedicatory memor...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of the American Academy of Religion 2003-09, Vol.71 (3), p.637-657
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description While Jain religious models of virtue articulate the renouncer as the focus of virtue, Jains likewise participate in the western Indian discourse of women's virtue, which centers around the dedicated wife (pativratā) and the virtuous woman (satī). The parole of virtue in Jain dedicatory memorials can be seen as explicitly gendered; lay Jains are represented as the great patron or the dedicated wife. For Jain laymen who cannot be represented as great patrons, there is no langue to use to represent them. For Jain laywomen, the discourse of satīs is invoked to frame the woman as virtuous and worthy of celebration—even in those memorials where women participate in the great patron model. These memorials are a place to examine how the telling of women's lives serves as a testing ground for competing ideologies and illustrates the patterns of negotiation between ideologies based on religious identity and gender.
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Whitney</creatorcontrib><title>Good Wives, Family Protectors: Writing Jain Laywomen's Memorials</title><title>Journal of the American Academy of Religion</title><addtitle>J Am Acad Relig</addtitle><description>While Jain religious models of virtue articulate the renouncer as the focus of virtue, Jains likewise participate in the western Indian discourse of women's virtue, which centers around the dedicated wife (pativratā) and the virtuous woman (satī). The parole of virtue in Jain dedicatory memorials can be seen as explicitly gendered; lay Jains are represented as the great patron or the dedicated wife. For Jain laymen who cannot be represented as great patrons, there is no langue to use to represent them. For Jain laywomen, the discourse of satīs is invoked to frame the woman as virtuous and worthy of celebration—even in those memorials where women participate in the great patron model. 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source MEDLINE; JSTOR Archive Collection A-Z Listing; Oxford University Press Journals All Titles (1996-Current)
subjects Asian religions
Ceremonial Behavior
Cultural Characteristics
Discourse
Exegesis & hermeneutics
Family Characteristics - ethnology
Family Health - ethnology
Gender Identity
Hindus
History
History and sciences of religions
History of medicine
History, 19th Century
History, 20th Century
History, 21st Century
Housekeeping - economics
Housekeeping - history
Housekeeping - legislation & jurisprudence
Husbands
India - ethnology
Memory
Men
Mothers
Narratives
Protectors
Religion
Religion - history
Religious rituals
Residence Characteristics
Self immolation
Social Conditions - economics
Social Conditions - history
Social Conditions - legislation & jurisprudence
Social Identification
Theology
Vedic religions. Hinduism. Jainism. Sikhism
Virtues
Wives
Women
Women - education
Women - history
Women - psychology
Women's Health - ethnology
Women's Health - history
Women's Rights - economics
Women's Rights - education
Women's Rights - history
Women's Rights - legislation & jurisprudence
title Good Wives, Family Protectors: Writing Jain Laywomen's Memorials
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