Women in Myth
Material type: TextAlbany, NY State Univ. of New York Press c1997Description: xxii, 270p.; bibliog. notes; bibliog.; indexContent type:- text
- unmediated
- volume
- 0-7914-31694-9
- Women in Mythology
- Mythology--Psychological aspects
- Women and religion
- Isis
- Creation--Mythology
- Mythology, Sumerian
- Deborah (Biblical judge)
- Euripides
- Iphigenia
- Sacrifice, Human
- Salome
- Mothers and Daughters
- Virgil: Aeneid
- Dido
- Carthage (Extinct city)
- Amazons
- Amaterasu (Shinto deity)
- Sun (in religion, folklore, etc.)
- Goddesses, Japanese
- Goddesses, Egyptian
- Goddesses, Chinese
- Hindu goddesses
- Mythology, Hindu
- Ramayana
- Sita
Item type | Home library | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Books | Zeller Library | M.Kna (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1 | Available | B03484 |
Enuma Elish is a Babylonian version of the Sumerian creation myth of the power struggle between female and male principles, in which Tiamat, the primordial mother, is dismembered by Marduk.. Mothers and Daughters: Herodias and Salome. Dido was the founder of Carthage; Camilla was an Amazon. Chinese goddesses discussed: Nu-Kua; Hsi Wang Mu; Ch'ang-O; Kuan Yin
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
'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.'
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