ABSTRACT

This book is the first to present current scholarship on gender and in regional and sectarian versions of the Rāmāyaṇa. Contributors explore in what ways the versions relate to other Rāmāyaṇa texts as they deal with the female persona and the cultural values implicit in them. Using a wide variety of approaches, both analytical and descriptive, the authors discover common ground between narrative variants even as their diversity is recognized.

It offers an analysis in the shaping of the heterogeneous Rāma tradition through time as it can be viewed from the perspective of narrating women's lives. Through the analysis of the representation and treatment of female characters, narrative inventions, structural design, textual variants, and the idiom of composition and technique in art and sculpture are revealed and it is shown what and in which way these alternative versions are unique.

A sophisticated exploration of the Rāmāyaṇa, this book is of great interest to academics in the fields of South Asian Studies, Asian Religion, Asian Gender and Cultural Studies.

chapter 1|17 pages

Re-creation, refashioning, rejection, response…

How the narrative developed

chapter 3|13 pages

Betrayed by the beloved

Lustful wives and devoted mothers in the Jain Rāmāyaṇas

chapter 5|18 pages

Afflicted mothers and abused women

The words behind the pictures

chapter 6|18 pages

Women in crisis

South Indian pictorial versions of the Rāmāyaṇa narrative

chapter 7|11 pages

Designing women

Felicitous malice in a Bengali Rāmāyaṇa

chapter 8|20 pages

Can sages and women dance side by side?

Contested text and gender in the Kavitāvalī of Tulsīdās

chapter 9|17 pages

Narrator and audience

Women's role as re-creators of the tradition

chapter 10|7 pages

Tales of the dispossessed

Women in the Rāmāyaṇa