Maya Sharma Sriram's Blog, page 2
February 9, 2013
La femme Nirvana: 'B' Goddess for Dummies - A review
La femme Nirvana: 'B' Goddess for Dummies - A review: Oh ok!! I still can't make myself say the B***** word! Not that I am a prude or anything - far from that. Believe me if you heard me whi...
Published on February 09, 2013 04:24
February 7, 2013
BGFD- on the Cosmopolitan List.
Yes! On The Books You Should Curl Up With list on January 2013 Cosmo issue .
And look who I am sharing the page with. Oh boy!


Published on February 07, 2013 05:23
January 17, 2013
So where did this book come from.?
That was the first question I was asked at the launch.
Well, there have been many times when things have not gone the way it should have and I have found myself thinking, 'you know what? I need to stop being so nice. ' Then I began to hear many other women echo this feeling. So that led me to wonder- what if? what if there was some body, some woman who decided, one day - enough is enough, No more nice girl.? The idea intrigued me, appealed to my wackier self and I chased the idea down. What kind of woman would actually follow through with this rather bizarre notion? What would she chose to become then? What could drive her to actually undertake this transformation? And thus Mira was born, as was Mira's story.
More questions from the launch to follow.
Do write in with your thoughts
Well, there have been many times when things have not gone the way it should have and I have found myself thinking, 'you know what? I need to stop being so nice. ' Then I began to hear many other women echo this feeling. So that led me to wonder- what if? what if there was some body, some woman who decided, one day - enough is enough, No more nice girl.? The idea intrigued me, appealed to my wackier self and I chased the idea down. What kind of woman would actually follow through with this rather bizarre notion? What would she chose to become then? What could drive her to actually undertake this transformation? And thus Mira was born, as was Mira's story.
More questions from the launch to follow.
Do write in with your thoughts
Published on January 17, 2013 19:26
January 16, 2013
The Launch- @ Crossword, Alwarpet, Chennai
Published on January 16, 2013 20:47
December 29, 2012
A review
Published on December 29, 2012 23:13
December 13, 2012
My very first review and a nice one too!
Saritha Rao Rayachoti: Bitch Goddess for Dummies - Maya Sharma Sriram: ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ The Blurb - Edgy and wickedly funny, this is exci...
Published on December 13, 2012 00:00
December 9, 2012
Of Goddesses and Bitch Goddesses
A friend ran a recent discussion thread on Sita and the various ways she has been interpreted in the various tellings of the Ramayana. . Lot of people had lot to say about Sita and many of them nice things. So I went away to ponder over what it was about her that bothered me. I was surprised by what I discovered.
I wouldn't be so bothered by her if we read Sita like how other cultures read their mythological characters- like how Diana or Athena or Medusa or Venus was read. Like a mythological god from our collective heritage. Unfortunately, Sita has been read , here, in a prescriptive manner. She has been held up as the image of' the 'Ideal Woman' and either directly or subliminally the message has been the one that say she is a n aspirational figure, the one to be emulated.
A lot can be said and has been too about how it stems from the Patriarchal Viewpoint and the desire to perpetuate the concept of wife who treats her husband as master and God. There is one side-story in one of the version of Ramayana, in which one of Sita's friends call her to the temple to pray and she replies saying that now that I am married ,Rama is my god , I cannot pray to another. It doesn't take a genius to figure why such ideas were fostered and encouraged in the female mind. This would have been extremely effective or dangerous. depending on your position in this argument, at a time when education was not accessible to women.
I didn't want to be a goddess and lot of you out there I am sure must have felt the same. I think the unconscious rebelling against such clever subliminal campaigning made me think ,'you know what, I don't want to be a Goddess, what I need to be is a Bitch Goddess"
And so Mira was born. Is that the ideal solution? I could answer it,but alas that would spoil the book for you. So we can discuss it after you read.the book.
A lot of the book is as tongue-in-cheek as the flippant remark I make about wanting to be a BG. So there will be quite a few laughs.
Eager to hear about what you think about Mira's journey.
Maya
I wouldn't be so bothered by her if we read Sita like how other cultures read their mythological characters- like how Diana or Athena or Medusa or Venus was read. Like a mythological god from our collective heritage. Unfortunately, Sita has been read , here, in a prescriptive manner. She has been held up as the image of' the 'Ideal Woman' and either directly or subliminally the message has been the one that say she is a n aspirational figure, the one to be emulated.
A lot can be said and has been too about how it stems from the Patriarchal Viewpoint and the desire to perpetuate the concept of wife who treats her husband as master and God. There is one side-story in one of the version of Ramayana, in which one of Sita's friends call her to the temple to pray and she replies saying that now that I am married ,Rama is my god , I cannot pray to another. It doesn't take a genius to figure why such ideas were fostered and encouraged in the female mind. This would have been extremely effective or dangerous. depending on your position in this argument, at a time when education was not accessible to women.
I didn't want to be a goddess and lot of you out there I am sure must have felt the same. I think the unconscious rebelling against such clever subliminal campaigning made me think ,'you know what, I don't want to be a Goddess, what I need to be is a Bitch Goddess"
And so Mira was born. Is that the ideal solution? I could answer it,but alas that would spoil the book for you. So we can discuss it after you read.the book.
A lot of the book is as tongue-in-cheek as the flippant remark I make about wanting to be a BG. So there will be quite a few laughs.
Eager to hear about what you think about Mira's journey.
Maya
Published on December 09, 2012 18:28
December 5, 2012
A peek into
Published on December 05, 2012 20:56
A Blog Mention
Published on December 05, 2012 20:56
November 28, 2012
My Book and I
Published on November 28, 2012 21:19