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Mary Condren

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Mary Condren



Average rating: 4.14 · 108 ratings · 15 reviews · 2 distinct worksSimilar authors
The Serpent and the Goddess...

4.12 avg rating — 104 ratings — published 1989 — 4 editions
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Through Us, with Us, in Us:...

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4.75 avg rating — 4 ratings — published 2009
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Quotes by Mary Condren  (?)
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“The image of the Serpent, because of its association with life, rejuvenation, fertility, and regeneration, was a symbol of immortality. The coiled Serpent with its tail in its mouth was a circle of infinitude indicating omnipotence and omniscience. The Serpent, depicted in several successive rings, represented cyclical evolution and reincarnation. In ancient philosophy or mythological systems, creation and wisdom were closely bound together, and the Serpent was a potent symbol of both. It is in this capacity that the Serpent appears in the Babylonian and Sumerian mythologies, which contain elements akin to the Genesis story. The Serpent has the power to bestow immortality but also has the power to cheat humankind. In many of the ancient Near Eastern stories—for instance, the Gilgamesh Epic and myth of Adapa—the Serpent holds out the promise of immortality but then cheats man at the last minute.”
Mary Condren, The Serpent and the Goddess: Women, Religion, and Power in Celtic Ireland

“The sacredness of the male mind is allied to the struggle for power in that men, claiming objectivity, can also claim universal validity for their values. In this sense the word man, correctly in their view, can encompass women, although the converse is not true and the word woman can never stand for the general but only for the particular.”
Mary Condren, The Serpent and the Goddess: Women, Religion, and Power in Celtic Ireland

“In the political and theological realms we are still stuck on the merry-go-round of church and state, capitalism and communism, Christian or Jew, Catholic or Protestant. We seem incapable of envisioning anything other than the dualistic and tired stalemate of contemporary patriarchal polity...”
Mary Condren, The Serpent and the Goddess: Women, Religion, and Power in Celtic Ireland



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