Beware the Crocodile

Female and Male Nature in Asvaghosa's Saundarananda

Authors

  • Alice Collett York St. John University Author

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1558/rosa.v7i1-3.60

Keywords:

Aśvaghoṣa, Buddhacarita, Buddhism, gender, Saundarananda

Abstract

In chapter eight of his Saundarananda, Asvaghosa launches into one of the fiercest attacks on women that can be found in early Buddhist literature. He evokes animal imagery and symbolism to demonstrate a manipulative and (sexually) aggressive nature for women, which he juxtaposes with a comparably weak will for men. He utilizes similes of entrapment whereby violent, aggressive and poisonous animals, birds or reptiles (women) ensnare weaker creatures (men). For example, women are 'hordes of crocodiles in a river', hawks that prey on pheasants, or snakes, whilst men are deer escaping hunters, birds enmeshed in a net or elephants trying to avoid crocodile infested waters. Whilst Asvaghosa's account of the sleeping harem women in the Buddhacarita has been cited by scholars of Buddhism and gender as representative of negative conceptualizations of women in ancient Indian Buddhist literature, the account in the Saundarananda, which is a far worse indictment of women, has received less attention. In this article, I will discuss Asvaghosa's attack on women centering on his use of animal imagery to portray male and female nature. In so doing, a central aim of the article is to give ownership of the Saundarananda and Buddhacarita back to Asvaghosa, whose accounts have previously been taken to be representative of views on women in early Buddhism. Through comparative analysis, whilst demonstrating the views of one male author, an ex-Brahmin poet, I will highlight these in direct contrast to other texts from early Indian Buddhism, which rarely present women in the same light. Finally, I will look at Asvaghosa the author, and attempt to discern his own preoccupations and predilections.

Author Biography

  • Alice Collett, York St. John University

    Alice Collett is currently a Fellow of the Arts and Humanities Council of Great Britain (AHRC) and Lecturer at York St John University. She received her M.A. for the University of Bristol in 1999 and her Ph.D. from Cardiff University in 2004. Since then she has worked in different universities in North America and the UK, and published several articles on women in early Indian Buddhism, including two which look at reception history and review the modern scholarly debate on the subject. Her recent books include Women in Early Indian Buddhism: Comparative Textual Studies (in press), an edited volume which includes study of Buddhist texts in five different languages. She is currently working on a monograph entitled Women in the Pāli Canon and Commentaries, for which she is in receipt of an AHRC research award.

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Published

2019-03-29

Issue

Section

Second Tantra: Conflict, Ethics, Environment

How to Cite

Collett, A. (2019). Beware the Crocodile: Female and Male Nature in Asvaghosa’s Saundarananda. Religions of South Asia, 7(1-3), 60-74. https://doi.org/10.1558/rosa.v7i1-3.60