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Books > Philosophy > Western philosophy > Ancient Western philosophy to c 500 > General
This book analyses the diverse ways in which women have been
represented in the Puranic traditions in ancient India - the
virtuous wife, mother, daughter, widow, and prostitute - against
the socio-religious milieu around CE 300-1000. Puranas (lit.
ancient narratives) are brahmanical texts that largely fall under
the category of socio-religious literature which were more
broad-based and inclusive, unlike the Smrtis, which were accessible
mainly to the upper sections of society. In locating, identifying,
and commenting on the multiplicity of the images and depictions of
women's roles in Puranic traditions, the author highlights their
lives and experiences over time, both within and outside the
traditional confines of the domestic sphere. With a focus on five
Mahapuranas that deal extensively with the social matrix Visnu,
Markandeya Matsya, Agni, and Bhagavata Puranas, the book explores
the question of gender and agency in early India and shows how such
identities were recast, invented, shaped, constructed, replicated,
stereotyped, and sometimes reversed through narratives. Further, it
traces social consequences and contemporary relevance of such
representations in marriage, adultery, ritual, devotion, worship,
fasts, and pilgrimage. This volume will be of interest to
researchers and scholars in women and gender studies, ancient
Indian history, religion, sociology, literature, and South Asian
studies, as also the informed general reader.
Described as "a powerful, brilliant, and original study" when first
published, this second edition of Froma Zeitlin's experiment in
decoding the Aeschylus' Seven Against Thebes in the light of
contemporary theory now updates her explorations of the tragic
struggle between Eteocles and Polyneices, the doomed sons of
Oedipus, with a new preface, a new afterword, and the addition of
the relevant Greek texts. The mutual self-destruction of the enemy
brothers in this last act of the cursed family is preceded (and
determined) by one of Aeschylus' most daring innovations through
the pairing of the shields of attackers and defenders in the
central scene of the play as an extended dialogue explicitly
concerned with visual and verbal symbols. In a preliminary
consideration of the relations between language and kinship and
between city and family, between self and society, as determining
forces in fifth-century drama, the heart of the book is a detailed
investigation of this tour de force of semiotic energy. Zeitlin's
decipherment of this provocative text yields a heightened
appreciation of Aeschylus' compositional artistry and the
complexity of his worldview. At the same time, this study points
the way to Zeitlin's larger engagement with the special ideological
role that the city of Thebes comes to play on the tragic stage as
the negative counterpart to the self-representation of Athens.
The" Posterior Analytics" contains Aristotle's Philosophy of
Science. In Book 2, Aristotle asks how the scientist discovers what
sort of loss of light constitutes lunar eclipse. The scientist has
to discover that the moon's darkening is due to the earth's shadow.
Once that defining explanation is known the scientist possesses the
full scientific concept of lunar eclipse and can use it to explain
other necessary features of the phenomenon. The present commentary,
arguably misascribed to Philoponus, offers some interpretations of
Aristotle that are unfamiliar nowadays. For example, the scientific
concept of a human is acquired from observing particular humans and
repeatedly receiving impressions in the sense image or percept and
later in the imagination. The impressions received are not only of
particular distinctive characteristics, like paleness, but also of
universal human characteristics, like rationality. Perception can
thus in a sense apprehend universal qualities in the individual as
well as particular ones.
Proclus' Commentary on Plato's dialogue Timaeus is arguably the
most important commentary on a text of Plato, offering unparalleled
insights into eight centuries of Platonic interpretation. This
edition offered the first new English translation of the work for
nearly two centuries, building on significant advances in
scholarship on Neoplatonic commentators. It provides an invaluable
record of early interpretations of Plato's dialogue, while also
presenting Proclus' own views on the meaning and significance of
Platonic philosophy. The present volume, the third in the edition,
offers a substantial introduction and notes designed to help
readers unfamiliar with this author. It presents Proclus' version
of Plato's account of the elements and the mathematical proportions
which bind together the body of the world.
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