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The IUP Journal of English Studies :
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Description |
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According to Shakti tradition in Hindu religious and philosophical thought, the ultimate
reality of the cosmos is a feminine principle. The ‘peerless splendor,’ that is the
Goddess, as described in the epigraph above, is an all-pervading female spiritual
energy that fills the cosmos. ‘Shakti,’ when translated, means divine energy, a female
manifestation of the Supreme Being. The epigraph describes the moment of the creation
of Goddess Durga, as delineated in a classical sixth century Sanskrit text called the Devi
Mahatmyam. Composed by sage Markandeya, Devi Mahatmyam remains one of the
pivotal texts of Shakti philosophy. Literally meaning “glory of the Goddess,” it is one of
the first comprehensive accounts of the Goddess to have appeared in Sanskrit
(Coburn 1991).1 Furthermore, Dehejia and Coburn (1999) aver that with this text, the
worship of the female principle took on dramatic new dimensions.
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Keywords |
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English Studies Journal, Graphic Retellings, Durga, Mythology, Hindu religious, philosophical, Taking Anant Pai’s Tales of Durga (Amar Chitra Katha), Priya’s Shakti, Ganesh’s, Mahisasuramardini, Culture. |
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