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As with my premodern list, this list represents warrior women in the nonwestern cultures related to India and Hinduism, the Middle-East and the Islam, and Nigeria and Hausa folklore. I have traced the concept of the Amazon myth in a circle from Greece and Italy to Scandinavia, down through the Middle-East, Syria in particular, into India, and around to Nigeria, pointing towards Greece once more. Every area has stories about warrior women in their mythos, and they have a lot in common. The majority are archers, for example. Unlike the Greek and Norse mythos, the women in the Mahabharata and the Qu'ran are religious figures themselves, either aiding the male protagonist or defending him. This list compiles variations of these religious texts. I needed to make sure the various translations and meanings in the texts were similar. Neither of these books translates well into English. The Dahomey Amazons are something that has only recently come of interest after they were revealed to be the inspiration for the Dora Milaje warriors in Black Panther. Most of what I have gathered on the Dahomey Amazons is through ethnographic pieces and collections of oral stories and accounts. Mny of these texts appear theoretical because of their titles, but they are the only sources for some of these stories and myths. I have added as much Hausa folklore as I could find that influences the Nigerian archetype. The authors of modern African/Nigerian American speculative fiction, formerly Afrofuturism, are essentially putting a lot of these archetypes in print for the first time.
Achebe, Chinua. “Chike’s School Days.”
Akbar, Shaik. Khawla bint Al Azwar The Woman who fought like Khalid bin Walid.
Akinjogbin, I.A. Dahomey and its Neighbors, 1708-1818.
Alpern, Stanley B. “On the Origins of the Amazons of Dahomey”
gender, politics, and culture in the Kingdom of Dahomey,”
Blier, Suzanne Preston. “’The Path of the Leopard’ Motherhood and Majesty in Early Danhome,”
Cartwright, Keith. Reading Africa into American Literature Epics, Fables, and Gothic Tales.
Du, Nguyen. The Tale of Kieu Global Nepali Museum. “The Androgynous Form of Shiva and Parvati (Ardhanarishvara),”
Harvard Divinity School. “The Third Gender and Hijras,”
Mahabharata India’s Greatest Epic, by Chandrakant, Kamala
Mahabharata. Trans. C. Rajagopalachari
Seven Tales from Northern Malawi as Told by a Master Performer of the Oral Narrative.
An Account of the Female Warriors of an African Kingdom
(Re)- writing Women’s Participation in Jihad Into the History of Late Imperial Gansu,”
Satrapi, Marjane. The Complete Persepolis
Seid, Betty. “The Lord Who Is Half Woman (Ardhanarishvara).”
Smith, Alexander, McCall. The No. 1 Ladies’ Detective Agency --Tears of the Giraffe
Stewart, Dianne, Folktales from Africa
A West African Epic of the Mande Peoples