The Notion of Solitude in Pali Buddhist Literature: Finding a Space in the Crowd
By (Author) Indaka Nishan Weerasekera
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Academic
11th December 2025
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
294.34435
Paperback
272
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
Exploring how notions of solitude in Pali literature are encompassed in various literary forms, such as stock formulae, poetry, narrative, and imagery, this book includes close analysis of some of the most famous Buddhist verses about solitary practice.
Indaka Nishan Weerasekera considers how solitude is valued as one significant aspect of the Buddhist path, including how the imagery of landscape, especially the forest, serves to both inspire solitary practice as well as functions as a metaphor for meditation.
The author employs a cross-section of primary sources to explore the practical and psychological aspects of solitude in relation to Buddhist meditation, as well as relational/attitudinal concepts such as renunciation or desirelessness, independence, and self-reliance. This lonely aspect of the Buddhist path sits alongside the communal aspect of the Buddhist teachings. Together, they serve to maintain monastic harmony, while the social aspect preserves monastic relations with wider society.
In this beautifully written thematic study, Weerasekera shows how solitude in Theravada Buddhism becomes a solace found in many places even in company. The therapeutic levels of being alone include physical separation, the revivifying qualities of the natural world, meditation, and liberating seclusion, from ones own past selves and hindrances. This work is both scholarly and restorative. * Sarah Shaw, Honorary Fellow, Oxford Centre for Buddhist Studies, UK *
Indaka Nishan Weerasekera is an independent scholar of Buddhist Studies, UK.