Dr. Carla Ionescu’s book “She Who Hunts” was a much needed read for me!
I had ‘met’ Artemis before in mythology books, and fiction and was always left wanting to learn much much more. “She Who Hunts” is not only a comprehensive guide on who Artemis is, but a wonderfully supported argument about how she has been marginalized throughout history and in mythological writings as a ‘lesser goddess’ when in fact her scope, realm and influence reach far and wide beyond more well known and celebrated goddesses such as Athena and Aphrodite. In short, she is just as majestic, important and powerful, in human life and perhaps even more influential in understanding the nature of existence itself, than the more popular goddesses we’ve heard far more about.
For me personally, because ever since taking mythology in university and reading the works of Homer, Aeschylus and Euripides, I have strongly felt mythology has lain the first foundations for psychology as an attempt to understand archetypal human characters, I have been left wanting to know much much more about Artemis. Who is/was she? What archetype was she meant to represent in the past and in modern times and terms?
“She Who Hunts” answered all my questions completely not only academically, but personally regarding Artemis.
Mythology is of course deeply spiritual and knowing that there is a goddess ‘out there’ who represents me and others like me far more completely and closely than Athena or Aphrodite, Hera or Demeter made me feel more ‘at home’ in the universe.
Dr. Ionescu also has the crucial gift of being able to write a fully academic and well supported work in a way that is fully accessible also to any reader. She writes with reverence, respect and even tenderness bringing Artemis to life with excerpts from literature and poetry while also fully academically supporting a much more important place for Artemis in the Pantheon of Greek Mythology.