About this item
Highlights
- The names of Mirabai, Akka Mahadevi and Andal, are known to many, but innumerable women poets remain relatively unknown.
- About the Author: Arundhathi Subramaniam (Ed.)
- 428 Pages
- Poetry, Women Authors
Description
About the Book
Poems are translated from Indic languages.Book Synopsis
The names of Mirabai, Akka Mahadevi and Andal, are known to many, but innumerable women poets remain relatively unknown. When we hear of them, it is invariably as plaster saints or meek followers. It is time to smell the danger in their words again, to listen to their feral sensuality, their searing questions
about custodians of gender and faith. It is time to tune into their brazenness, their heartbreaking
longing. Not just for their sake but for ours too.
Bhakti and Sufi mystics, tantrikas and Vedantins. There are women here, and men singing as women, and both raising their voices in praise of the sacred feminine. Brought to us through translation, these poems surprise with how intimately familiar their ravenous yearnings and ecstatic freedoms are. Wild Women invites us to reclaim an explosive inheritance of female power, rapture and wisdom.
About the Author
Arundhathi Subramaniam (Ed.) (Anthology Editor, Author)
ARUNDHATHI SUBRAMANIAM is a poet and spiritual traveller. Her books include a volume on contemporary women on sacred journeys, Women Who Wear Only Themselves; the bestselling biography of a contemporary mystic, Sadhguru: More Than a Life; anthologies of Bhakti poetry, Eating God, and of essays on sacred journeys, Pilgrim's India. She has also written the much-reprinted Book of Buddha.