Divine and demoniac Mahisa`s heroic struggle with Durga
Material type: TextPublication details: New Delhi Oxford University Press 1995Description: xiv,318 p. 23 cmISBN:- 978195643718
- 294.5211 22 BE-D
Item type | Home library | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
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OPJGU Sonepat- Campus Main Library | General Books | 294.5211 BE-D (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 122444 |
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294.5178362 GO-R Religion and ecology in India and southeast Asia | 294.52 GO- The Gods at play : Lila in South Asia / | 294.52 HI-D Dharma its early history in law, religion, and narrative | 294.5211 BE-D Divine and demoniac Mahisa`s heroic struggle with Durga | 294.5211 KI-D The divine player : a study of Krsna lila / | 294.5211 KI-H Hindu goddesses visions of the divine feminine in the Hindu religious tradition | 294.5211 MA-B Book of Lakshmi |
Includes bibliographical references (p. 293-303) and index.
1. Family and Society in Contemporary India -- 2. Birth of the Hero -- 3. The Labours of Mahisa -- 4. The Demon/Deity Spectrum -- 5. The Mahisa/Devi Encounters -- 6. The Battle -- 7. The Battle as Sacrifice: Mahisa as Victim -- 8. Festival: Myth/Rite Equations -- 9. The Life Stages of the Hero: Depictions in Stone -- Appendices: Congruent Motifs in Myth.
This is a remarkable study of the contemporary power of a myth whose origins can be traced back to the ancient civilizations of Europe, Egypt, Mesopotamia, and South Asia. The author views the myth as a significant reflection of the tension between the adolescent male, striving for a separate identity, and the dominating mother figure, filtered through the consciousness of the Brahmin priest/myth maker/narrator.
Basing her discussion on the classical Hindu versions of the legend, the author intersperses her analysis of the psychological meaning of the narrative with observations of how the present-day attitudes and behaviour of the Hindu male bear out such an interpretation.
A further dimension is added to this study by accounts of the annual ritual enactment of the myth both in village and urban settings (evoked by fascinating photographs taken by the author), which reveal how deeply cathartic an experience living through this ancient narrative is for the devotee. Finally, the enduring value of the myth is demonstrated by an analysis of sculptural representations in India over a period of 2000 years, illustrated with eight pages of photographs.
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