Contestation and Compliance: Retrieving Women's 'Agency' from Puranic Traditions
Jaya Tyagi
This book is a study of the shifts in historical context of ritual observances from Vedic to Puranic traditions. It looks into the representations of women in early textual traditions to explore how women's identities are not only established in ritual spaces but are also constantly reworked
and negotiated. It is in this context that this book attempts to're-read' the Matsyamahapurana and through the study of vratas and myths, reconstruct the anxieties that theological traditions have with regard to women and women's responses to these anxieties. Patriarchal traditions have never
remained frozen, they constantly reinvent themselves to deal with the negotiations and contestations that women make. It is these very traditions then, which, when read carefully, tell us about women and the challenges that they constantly put to theological traditions. The book will revise our
understanding of later Vedic and Puranic texts as well as provide a deeper understanding of the gender roles that evolved during this time period.
and negotiated. It is in this context that this book attempts to're-read' the Matsyamahapurana and through the study of vratas and myths, reconstruct the anxieties that theological traditions have with regard to women and women's responses to these anxieties. Patriarchal traditions have never
remained frozen, they constantly reinvent themselves to deal with the negotiations and contestations that women make. It is these very traditions then, which, when read carefully, tell us about women and the challenges that they constantly put to theological traditions. The book will revise our
understanding of later Vedic and Puranic texts as well as provide a deeper understanding of the gender roles that evolved during this time period.
年:
2014
出版社:
Oxford University Press, USA
语言:
english
页:
336
ISBN 10:
0199451826
ISBN 13:
9780199451821
文件:
PDF, 4.89 MB
IPFS:
,
english, 2014