Splitting the Difference-Gender and Myth in Ancient Greece and India
by Wendy Doniger

(ISBN:0-19565890-6 ~ Pub Year: 2002 ~ Pages:376 ~ Binding: Paperback ~ Publisher: Oxford)

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In this book Wendy Doniger recounts and compares several tales from ancient Greek and Indian mythology to demonstrate that Greek and Indian stories of women resemble each other more than the tales of men in the same culture.

Hindu and Greek mythologies teem with gendered narratives of doubling and bifurcation: stories of women and men who are doubled, who double themselves, who are seduced by gods doubling as mortals, whose bodies are split or divided. In this book Wendy Doniger recounts and compares several tales from ancient Greek and Indian mythology to demonstrate that Greek and Indian stories of women resemble each other more than the tales of men in the same cultures. In casting Hindu and Greek mythologies as shadows of each other, Doniger shows that culture is sometimes the shadow of gender. Myth, she argues, response to the complexities of the human condition by multiplying or splitting its characters into unequal parts, where these sloughed and cloven selves animate mythology's prodigious plots of sexuality and mortality.

A new Preface, written in her own unique style and especially for this edition, touches upon some of the new discoveries Doniger has made since the publication of the hardback.

EXCERPTS FROM REVIEWS

Doniger executes her comparative studies of the myriad Indic and Greek traditions with the greatest skill and panache.

-George Nagy, Harvard University

A work of daunting scholarship, born out of exacting patience and devout passion… a compelling ride through the forgotten/half-forgotten turfs of human fantasies around sexuality)-male, female and androgynous.
- Indian review of Books
Whatever will become of gender studies? Or Classics? Or theatre? Doniger has scooped them all.
- Mary Douglas, University College, London


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