ikhet_sekhmet: (Default)
In her book Laughter of Aphrodite, Carol P. Christ tells us, "I also reject the image of the divine warrior as female [and] Goddesses of war such as Ishtar and Athena. I do not believe that the images of warrior Goddesses grew out of experiences, values, and cultures created by women. But even if they did, I would not view them as liberating images for us today."

I worship the goddess called Inanna by the Sumerians and Ishtar by the Babylonians, so Christ's words are a direct challenge to someone like me. Christ says she respects the choice of feminists who are inspired by images of female warriors such as the Amazons, but she hopes "they will also carefully examine the implications of the symbol of a warrior God/Goddess in a nuclear age."

There are a number of ways I can respond to Christ's challenge - I think the most salient being that the greedy land grabs which have been dignified with the title "war" are only one use to which aggression can be put. A warrior goddess, and a warrior woman, can fight for other things.

Inanna/Ishtar is a complicated character - trickster, bride, midwife, and whore, rain goddess as well as "queen of attack and hand-to-hand fighting". But her ferocious temper and her association with weapons and battle mean that if any goddess can be called a Goddess of War, She can. Enheduanna arms Inanna with lance, mace, axe, bow, and dagger, and compares her to a male soldier. She describes Inanna slashing and smashing her enemies' heads and gorging on their corpses like a dog.

But when we examine Inanna's stories, what does she actually go to war for? In Inanna and Ebih, the goddess subdues a mountain that failed to pay her the appropriate divine respect. More importantly, she does so explicitly without the support of An, king of the gods. Betty de Shong Meador says: 'We witness a moment of transformation. She who formerly bowed to great An, as daughter to father, now moves on her own, against his will... Inanna commands her forces free of An, free of the Anunna, superior to all gods… She rules alone, not at the behest of An.' This is little like the stories of earthly war in the Hebrew Bible; it's a coming-of-age tale, the victory of a goddess over not just her enemy, but the patriarchal structure of heaven itself.

In Inanna and Šu-kale-tuda, the goddess relentlessly pursues a shepherd who raped Her while She slept, cursing the land by turning water to blood and blocking the roads until She obtains justice. The Exaltation of Inanna is a lamentation: Enheduanna, the high priestess whose writings promoted Inanna to her high status, has been unfairly ousted from her position. She vividly describes the goddess' warlike nature as part of her prayer for rescue.

Carol Christ points out Yahweh's positive side in the Hebrew Bible, liberating his people and demanding social justice from them, but she says this can't be divorced from his warlike nature. In Inanna, the demand for justice seems actually fused with bloodthirstiness. Betty De Shong Meador says of Her, 'Inanna is an unsubdued, multifaceted, energetic female force. She is raw energy bursting for expression.'

There is a crucial difference between ancient and modern Paganism: what were once state religions which maintained the status quo have become alternative religions which can challenge the status quo. In the stories we have of her, Inanna/Ishtar is a fighter, but not a conqueror; she battles for herself, not for the state. For modern women, an independent, assertive, and courageous warrior goddess like Inanna/Ishtar has a very different meaning to Yahweh, the 'man of war'.

ETA: A thoughtful posting on this problem at Medusa Coils.

__
Christ, Carol P. "Yahweh as Divine Warrior". in Laughter of Aphrodite: Reflections on a Journey to the Goddess. Harper and Row, San Francisco, 1987.
Jacobsen, Thorkild. The Treasures of Darkness: a history of Mesopotamian religion. Yale University Press, New Haven and London, 1976.
Meador, Betty De Shong. Inanna: Lady of Largest Heart: Poems of the Sumerian High Priestess Enheduanna. University of Texas Press, Austin, 2000
ikhet_sekhmet: (Default)
This book is by Jungian analyst Betty De Shong Meador, who first encountered Inanna as a symbol in a dream. After my previous posting I should immediately add that the book was published by the University of Texas Press, and that Meador has done her homework - also that her comments are very accessible. The first part of the book describes Meador's research into Enheduanna; the second part is Meador's translations of the high priestess' hymns to Inanna.

In the foreword, writing teacher Judy Grahn describes the struggle to grasp and translate the ancient poetry. "... finally, the sinuous, breathtaking, full body of the howling, spitting, untamed goddess writhed completely into view." Blimey! (The foreword itself is worth the price of admission.)

In her Introduction, Meador describes Enheduanna's passionate love for Inanna, and her effort to lift the goddess above all other Sumerian deities. Meador suggests the priestess may have done so to re-establish a balance between the power of nature and the human power of her conquering father, Sargon, and nephew, Naram-Sin. This is not merely fanciful - it was Sargon who first equated the Sumerian Inanna with the Semitic Ishtar, a symbolic part of uniting his new empire.

Meador describes the goddess thus:
In these poems we see that the very being of this goddess infuses and vivifies all nature and natural processes. She is the divine in matter. As such, she sustains the ebb and flow, the relentless paradoxical reality of the natural world. She exists between blessing and curse, light and dark, plenty and want, goodness and malevolence... Implicit in her presence is a divine plan, a sacred order and meaning. Enigmatic as the plan may be, it is [implied] by Inanna's careful attention to the workings of the world and the people in it."
She also succinctly explains the attraction of ancient goddesses to modern women: "...a spirituality grounded in the reflection of a divine woman, offering a full sense of foundation and legitimacy as females." (I add: in the Abrahamic religions of Judaism, Christianity, and Islam, no woman has ever been divine and nothing female ever will be. The female is a sort of useful add-on, not a fundamental part of the cosmos.)
___

Meador, Betty De Shong. Inanna: Lady of Largest Heart: Poems of the Sumerian High Priestess Enheduanna. University of Texas Press, Austin, 2000.

Profile

ikhet_sekhmet: (Default)
Plaything of Sekhmet

December 2024

S M T W T F S
1234567
891011121314
15161718192021
222324252627 28
293031    

Syndicate

RSS Atom

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Jul. 15th, 2025 01:21 pm
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios