Masked Women and Myths in “The Thousand Faces of Night”

The term ‘Myth’ has a series of controversies associated with its meaning and interpretation. Myth is believed to be an intellectual creation of ancient man. They are culture specific ideas, beliefs, narratives etc. which are created to enlighten humans of morality, ethics, responsibility, obligatio...

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Main Author: Dr. Chandramani
Format: Article
Language:Bengali
Published: Supriyo Chakraborty, Penprints Publication 2020-12-01
Series:Litinfinite
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.litinfinite.com/wp-content/uploads/1_Dr.-Chandramani.pdf
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spelling doaj-f6e9cada885f43f2bb24f3395de9dcd72021-05-03T07:27:10ZbenSupriyo Chakraborty, Penprints PublicationLitinfinite2582-04002020-12-0122011010.47365/litinfinite.2.2.2020.1-10Masked Women and Myths in “The Thousand Faces of Night”Dr. Chandramani0Assistant Professor (English), Veer Surendra Sai University of Technology, Odisha. India.The term ‘Myth’ has a series of controversies associated with its meaning and interpretation. Myth is believed to be an intellectual creation of ancient man. They are culture specific ideas, beliefs, narratives etc. which are created to enlighten humans of morality, ethics, responsibility, obligations etc. The main focus of the paper would be to employ mythology from feministic perspective. Githa Hariharan’s The Thousand Faces of Night highlights the domination and subjugation of women (i.e. victimhood) in male-centered set-up. The writer opts for mythological stories (Mahabharata and Folktales) as patriarchal discourse to lend voice to the silenced females. It is interesting to note that even in mythological works women are illustrated as subjects/objects of sheer violence. Hariharan claims that woman characters like Mayamma and Devi silently accept all the discrimination, suppression, and protest assertively against the forces of patriarchy are representative of transitional women. More significantly, Hariharan urges for a progressive society where women can exercise their personal space. Through a careful depiction of various myths and folktales, Hariharan wants to project the self-realization and psychological consciousness.https://www.litinfinite.com/wp-content/uploads/1_Dr.-Chandramani.pdfmythsfolklorefeminist
collection DOAJ
language Bengali
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Dr. Chandramani
spellingShingle Dr. Chandramani
Masked Women and Myths in “The Thousand Faces of Night”
Litinfinite
myths
folklore
feminist
author_facet Dr. Chandramani
author_sort Dr. Chandramani
title Masked Women and Myths in “The Thousand Faces of Night”
title_short Masked Women and Myths in “The Thousand Faces of Night”
title_full Masked Women and Myths in “The Thousand Faces of Night”
title_fullStr Masked Women and Myths in “The Thousand Faces of Night”
title_full_unstemmed Masked Women and Myths in “The Thousand Faces of Night”
title_sort masked women and myths in “the thousand faces of night”
publisher Supriyo Chakraborty, Penprints Publication
series Litinfinite
issn 2582-0400
publishDate 2020-12-01
description The term ‘Myth’ has a series of controversies associated with its meaning and interpretation. Myth is believed to be an intellectual creation of ancient man. They are culture specific ideas, beliefs, narratives etc. which are created to enlighten humans of morality, ethics, responsibility, obligations etc. The main focus of the paper would be to employ mythology from feministic perspective. Githa Hariharan’s The Thousand Faces of Night highlights the domination and subjugation of women (i.e. victimhood) in male-centered set-up. The writer opts for mythological stories (Mahabharata and Folktales) as patriarchal discourse to lend voice to the silenced females. It is interesting to note that even in mythological works women are illustrated as subjects/objects of sheer violence. Hariharan claims that woman characters like Mayamma and Devi silently accept all the discrimination, suppression, and protest assertively against the forces of patriarchy are representative of transitional women. More significantly, Hariharan urges for a progressive society where women can exercise their personal space. Through a careful depiction of various myths and folktales, Hariharan wants to project the self-realization and psychological consciousness.
topic myths
folklore
feminist
url https://www.litinfinite.com/wp-content/uploads/1_Dr.-Chandramani.pdf
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