Bibliographic Information

Women in myth

Bettina L. Knapp

State University of New York Press, c1997

  • pbk. : alk. paper

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. 249-260) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

In Women in Myth, Bettina L. Knapp explores the role played by women in ancient societies through analysis of specific myths from nine different lands. The author probes issues as to how figures such as Isis, Tiamat, Dido, Camilla, Deborah, Iphigenia, Salome, Sita, Amaterasu, Nü-Kwa, and others—some of whom were goddesses—fared. She discusses their abilities and their outlooks, whether their views were gender oriented or androgynous, whether they were deprived of the most basic human rights or excluded from the highest functions of religious worship. Knapp explores whether or not these women had done battle, led armies, founded states, ruled lands, or experienced identity crises. She allows the reader to establish parallels as well as dichotomies between the lives of ancient and contemporary women. The reliving of specific episodes from thousands of years ago as reported in the great myths brings insights into certain relationships and sheds light on events and their ramifications in today's home and workplace.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments Introduction 1. Isis: Harmony of Flesh/Spirit/Logos 2. Enuma Elish: The Feminine Maligned 3. Deborah:Judge/Prophet/Poet/Military Leader 4. Euripides' Iphigenia: Marriage or Sacrificial Altar? 5. Herodias/Salome: Mother/Daughter Identification 6. Virgil's Aeneid: Let Us Sing of Arms and Women—Dido and Camilla 7. Japan's Sun Goddess: The Divine Amaterasu 8. China's Fragmented Goddess Images 9. The Ramayana: Sita Sanctified Conclusion Notes Bibliography Index

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