Goddess: Myths of the Female Divine
David Leeming author Jake Page author
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Oxford University Press Inc
Published:20th Jun '96
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
An old woman lives still among the broken slopes of the mountains in the land of the Tarahumara Indians. No one knows exactly where. She is sometimes seen standing along the highway near El Paso, hauling wood near Oaxaca, or even hitching a ride on a semi rig. She is the bone woman, the gatherer, La Loba. She collects bones, especially those of wolves. When she has collected enough bones to make a whole wolf, she sings over the skeleton, and it begins to grow flesh and fur. She sings some more and the wolf becomes strong; then it breathes. La Loba keeps singing and soon the wolf leaps up and runs off while the desert world trembles. And when a ray of the sun, or the moon, strikes it at just the right time and place, it turns into a woman, a laughing woman, who you may see running toward the horizon. In La Loba's cycle of death and rebirth and her metamorphosis from crone to life-giving mother to laughing maiden, we catch just one glimpse of the timeless allure and mystery of the Goddess. From the fertile earth mothers of the ancient world to the modern revival of interest in Wicca, or witchcraft, images and tales of the Female Divine have flourished and waned, intimidated, comforted, and inspired women and men from time immemorial. In Goddess, authors David Leeming and Jake Page gather some 75 of the most potent and meaningful of these tales in an extraordinarily rich and readable introduction of this divine figure as she has emerged from prehistory to the present. Told as a biography, we follow Goddess from her first Ice Age appearances as the all-encompassing, all-giving, and all-taking Earth, to her re-emergence as a powerful force in the myths of modern religion, psychology, and science. In tales of the Changing Woman of the Navajos and of Hera, Pandora, Eve, and Lilith, we see her traduced and sublimated by rising, and then, dominant, patriarchical cultures and civilizations, but never totally suppressed. In familiar and unfamiliar myths, Goddess comes alive, pulsing with her own energy, irrepressible behind her many cultural masks. She can be the Universe itself, the source of all being, the holy Virgin, the Earth-Mother nurturer, the madly...
"It is astonishing but satisfying that it takes 'two old Princeton boys' (so described by a daughter of one of the authors) first to understand Goddess myths clearly, then to put them in the right order. Based on thorough scholarship and written with enviable elan, the myths of the ancient worship of female procreativity are told with clarity and passion. This book goes on my shelf beside Bulfinch, Jane Harrison, Edith Hamilton, and Leeming's own The World of Myth."--Paul Bohannan, author of We, the Alien: An Introduction to Cultural Anthropology
"Rarely is the generative principle that Goddess represents addressed as comprehensively and with such enjoyable results. As traced by Leeming and Page, Goddess's protean variability raises many provocative questions as the tales--some of them literally hair-raising 'myth-teries- unfold."--Lewis R. Binford, author of Bones: Ancient Man and Modern Myths
ISBN: 9780195104622
Dimensions: 203mm x 132mm x 18mm
Weight: 249g
208 pages