Wednesday, April 14, 2010

Sallie Tisdale

A Buddhist woman who's written about porn. Do you really need another reason to go hear her?

Julia Lipscomb
GET LIT! 2010

The Financial Lives of Poetry Readings
Get Lit! made Spokane a “literary capital.” Next year, the festival runs into its biggest funding challenge.


Read About:

Jess Walter & Richard Russo, Reza Aslan, Janet Fitch, Anne Lappe, Victor Lodato, Kevin Sampsell, Patricia Smith, Sallie Tisdale, Janet Wong


Selected Shorts
Three actors, three short stories about Father's Day.


Peripheral Events
Get Lit offers more than 50 events. Here's the best of the rest.

MAIN MENU >>

Best known for: Talk Dirty to Me: An Intimate Philosophy of Sex. Tisdale conducts field research in adult stores, peep shows, and the pornography collection of the British Library for an exposé on the morality and philosophy of the Dionysian, non-academic topic of sex.

Her latest book: In Women of the Way: Discovering 2,500 Years of Buddhist Wisdom, Tisdale investigates the lives of 30 women who have been crucial forces in Buddhism, rewriting history from the viewpoint of marginalized voices. As a Buddhist woman herself, Tisdale gives voice to creative women who have been silenced.

Opening anecdote: Tisdale visits the enormous Zen temple of Eijerji in Japan and discovers that women have never practiced there. When she asks a guide if women are even allowed to use the same space as the men, he replies, “Officially, yes. But we have no facilities.” (Bathrooms. We need bathrooms.)

Confronting the misogyny within Buddhism: In the histories of Buddhism, Tisdale says, women have been marginalized as shameful: “Women … exist in footnotes and parenthetical asides, where they exist at all.”

But she’s in favor of sex: Tisdale inspires people not to deny their bodily desires. Establishing one’s own body and mind as a vessel for spiritual enlightenment, her philosophy is sexy in a way that has nothing to do with sex.

And it’s not just Buddhism’s problem: “In most cultures, in most countries, in most periods of time, a woman’s life is difficult by virtue of being a woman. Some sects of Buddhism eventually taught that a woman suffers from inevitable evils or ‘obstructions,’ such as having to leave home to be married, having to give birth, being neglected when she is old. Since no one wants to live with such things, no one would want to be born as a woman.”
— JULIA LIPSCOMB

Sallie Tisdale discusses Women of the Way: Discovering 2,500 Years of Buddhist Wisdom on Sunday, April 18, at 11:30 am at the Davenport Hotel’s Marie Antoinette Ballroom. Tickets: $10; free, students.

Also in Get Lit

Get Lit! 2010

The Financial Lives of Poetry Readings

Get Lit! made Spokane a “literary capital.” Next year, the festival runs into its biggest funding challenge.

Daniel Walters |
Wednesday, April 14,2010
Get Lit! 2010

Walter & Russo

Jess Walter and the author of Empire Falls talk screenplays and pot-dealing

Michael Bowen |
Wednesday, April 14,2010
Get Lit! 2010

Patricia Smith

Slam poetry about Hurricane Katrina, performed with live jazz accompaniment. Story

Natalie Johnson |
Wednesday, April 14,2010
Get Lit! 2010

Victor Lodato

A playwright creates a coming-of-age novel about growing up with grief

Michael Bowen |
Wednesday, April 14,2010
Get Lit! 2010

Reza Aslan

How to end the "war on terror"? Realize Islamofascists are fighting a war over the next world, not this one.

Nicholas Deshais |
Wednesday, April 14,2010

Also By Julia Lipscomb

CD Review

'Sinter Songs EP,' The Globes

The ex-Spokane band's new EP simmers without boiling over.

Julia Lipscomb |
Wednesday, May 19,2010


 
 
Close
Close
Close