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Untitled - Pondicherry University DSpace Portal

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14<br />

of Demeter and Persephone is an unwilling one, it is neither<br />

a question of the daughter's rebellion against the mother,<br />

nor the mother's relection of the daughter The myth<br />

lndlcates that each daughter, even in the millznia before<br />

Chrlst, must have longed for a mother whose love for her and<br />

whose power were so great as to undo rape and bring her back<br />

from death And every mother must have longed for the power<br />

of Demeter, the efflcacy of her anger, the reconciliation<br />

wlth her lost self<br />

1.5.2. One comes across such strong mothers In the<br />

Germanic folk epic Das Nibelungenlied and ln the figure of<br />

Clytemnestra in the Greek eplc trad~tlon In the former<br />

eplc, although Krlemhild's relatlonshlp to her mother Uta 1s<br />

a close one, Krlemhild does not refrarn from relectlng her<br />

mother's advlce and chooslng her own course of actlon, she<br />

relects the maternal role to whlch she was expected to<br />

crnflne herself Similarly, in the Greek epic, Clytemnestra<br />

becomes the antlchesis of the nurturing mother figure,<br />

turnlng her back on the maternal role as she seeks vengeance<br />

on her husband Agamemnon<br />

1.5.3. In Medleval literature, mothers are conspicuous by<br />

thelr absence From Chaucer and hls contemporaries, nothlng<br />

1s known of the work and actlvltles of medleval women, nor<br />

1s there any clue concerning the relatlonshlp between a

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