Ashes of Immortality: Widow Burning in India
by Catherine Weinberger-Thomas
Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 1999
Pp. XII + 322
This book by Catherine Weinberger-Thomas, professor of Hindi at the
Institut des Langues et Civilisations Orientales, renews the ongoing
debate on sati. This work attempts to see the phenomenon of sati, the
self-immolation of the widow on the funeral pyre of her husband, through
Hindy eyes, providing a wideranging account of ritual self-sacrifice and
self-mutilation in South Asia. It is based on fifteen years of fieldwork
in northern India, but also gives an historical account of the rite. The
book is furnished by interesting and original illustrations of sati and
women ritual suicides.
The book has originally been published in French in 1996 and this is
probably the reason why its bibliography looks slightly outdated (for a
more complete bibliography see Enrica Garzilli, "First Greek and Latin
Documents on Sahagamana and Some Connected Problems" in two parts, in
Indo-Iranian Journal, July 1997 and November 1997). Moreover, the
bibliography carries titles such as those on the philosophy of language
in the Trika system of Kashmir that have nothing to do with the subject
of the book itself: perhaps because the author is a (famous) French
scholar?
EG
Light in the Crevice Never Seen
by Haunani-Kay Trask
Corvallis, Oregon: Calyx Books, rev. ed. 1999 (1st ed. 1994)
Price: cloth USD 45.00; paper USD 16.00
This is an expanded edition of the first book of poetry by an indigenous
Hawaiian to be published in North America. The Author mostly describes
the beauty and the origins of her native land. Some of the poems have
appeared in well-known Hawaiian literary magazines.
This edition includes 12 new poems, an introduction by poet Eleanor
Wilner, a preface by the author and a glossary of Hawaiian words.
EG
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