Hello all
Well, it's often struck me that many of the stories of Vishnu
where Laksmi or some incarnation of her's is involved have
elements of sexual harassment (or threat of sexual assault) with
Vishnu coming to intervene on her side. The abduction of Sita is
certainly one example, but so it seems to me would be the Varaha
avatara. Krishna marrying Rukmani (by having to abduct her) is an
example too. In the Venkateshwara story where Vishnu is kicked in
the chest, Sri takes it as an affront to her boundaries.
The case of Narakasura seems different as in some presentations
it is Satyabhama who has to release the captured women (though she
arrives in battle with Krishna who faints I hear), but Krishna
marries the freed women as a way of securing their independence.
On this point it seemed to me that whenever Krishna married
someone they were basically free to carry on their life as they
choose (in the absence of further threat). (Rama's marriage to
Sita seems almost the opposite.)
It's also struck me that the backdrop story of Vishnu's demon
killing avataras that I grew up hearing--- of the four Kumaras who
are barred from entering Vaikunta and subsequently curse the
guards (forcing Vishnu to participate in their expiation)---
starts the ball rolling by calling out agism, as (I was told) they
were not allowed to enter because they seemed to young. But what
Vishnu has to endure with Sita as Rama is the absurdity of
patriarchy (listening to elders etc.,), which is sexist too. The
Krishna avatara seems to have gotten over that problem: he
generally doesn't listen to authorities as Krishna, or at least he
picks and chooses what authority to endorse, but he also liberally
finds his partner everywhere in many forms (in contrast to Rama).
I'm no philologist, so I cannot cite chapter and verse (all of
this largely from my memory raised in a Sri Vaishnava household),
and I'm sure that the details of these stories will vary according
to sources. But there does seem to be a strong theme in the Vishnu
Laksmi stories about sexual freedom, and the threat posed by
misogyny and patriarchy. Things go best for Laksmi and Vishnu when
patriarchy and misogyny have no pull in their environment.
Certainly, this generalizes for us all.
Best wishes,
Shyam
Shyam Ranganathan
Department of Philosophy
York University, Toronto> harrasment
orthography, yes - being harassed by domestic problems, one tends to forget the spelling rules.
Artur K.
2016-10-17 19:18 GMT+02:00 Artur Karp <karp@uw.edu.pl>:
Dear All,
Should I understand that there are no traces, no mentions of sexual harrasment in the entire - vast - corpus of ancient/medieval Indian literature?
My thanks to Nagaraj Paturi - for his hint re.
Artur Karp (ret)
Uniwersytet WarszawskiPolska
2016-10-07 20:16 GMT+02:00 Nagaraj Paturi <nagarajpaturi@gmail.com>:
I guess studies focussed on Draupadi's disrobing or Draupadi's harassment by Keechaka must have dealt with the issue of sexual harassment, though I do not have a ready bibliography.
On Fri, Oct 7, 2016 at 7:51 PM, Artur Karp <karp@uw.edu.pl> wrote:
______________________________Dear All,
has the topic of sexual harassment been ever addressed within South Asian Studies?
If not - why?
Artur Karp (ret.)
Uniwersytet WarszawskiPolska
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Nagaraj PaturiHyderabad, Telangana, INDIA.Former Senior Professor of Cultural StudiesFLAME School of Communication and FLAME School of Liberal Education,(Pune, Maharashtra, INDIA )
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