Reiko Ohnuma is Professor of Religion, Asian and Middle Eastern Studies, and Women's, Gender, and Sexuality Studies at Dartmouth College in Hanover, New Hampshire. She is a specialist in the Buddhist traditions of South Asia, with a particular focus on narrative literature, hagiography, and the role and imagery of women.
In Unfortunate Destiny: Animals in the Indian Buddhist Imagination, Reiko Ohnuma has succeeded in writing a readable, lively, entertaining, and outstandingly scholarly study. I was grateful for both her wit and lively turn of phrase and the depth of the analysis at hand. It is a work that will be central to any discussion of animals and animality in Buddhist studies for years to come. It will also clearly be of interest in religious studies and related disciplines whenever there is a discussion of religion and our nonhuman friends. --Paul Fuller, JAAR Reiko Ohnuma's marvelous new book shows us the complexity of early Buddhists' feelings about animals, feelings that are shaped by both spiritual aspiration and moral ambivalence. --Roger Jackson, Buddhadharma