Lost Goddesses: The Denial of Female Power in Cambodian History

Forside
NIAS Press, 2008 - 327 sider
Women had a high status in premodern Southeast Asia; this is constantly stated, especially in relation to discussions on the status of women today in the region. Why, then, is it that the position of women there today is far from equitable? Few studies have examined how, when, or even why this change came about.This is the first study ever to address the place of women in Cambodian history. A narrative and visual tour de force, it revises accepted perspectives in the history and geopolitical organization of Cambodia since c. 230 C.E. In so doing the book examines the relationship between women and power and analyzes the extent of female political and economic participation as revealed in historical sources, including the ways in which women were represented in art and literature.

Inni boken

Innhold

Introducing the Goddesses
1
Devi Rajni Dasi Mat
29
Behind the Apsara
42
Goddesses Lost?
74
Hostages Heroines and Hostilities
109
Traditional Cambodia
131
spiritual realm
139
Cherchez la femme
148
Liberation
181
Into the fields
218
Picking Up the Pieces
238
Cambodian women
247
Contemporary Conspiracies
259
2005
279
Goddesses Found
284
Index
321

Reap and Sisophon provinces represented as submissive women to
156

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Om forfatteren (2008)

Trudy Jacobsen is an ARC Postdoctoral Fellow in the School of Political and Social Inquiry, Monash University.

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