Details

This is my 3-Dimensional rendition of Atlus' interpretation of an Amazon from their 1995 Shin Megami Tensei: Debiru Samana- (Super Reincarnation of the Goddess: Devil Summoner) video game. In Megami Tensei titles, in addition to battling your opponents, it's also possible to recruit most of them into your party [or create them outright, by fusing the correct combination(s) of monsters together] and have them fight by your side. As such, if you wished to do so, you could potentially have an Amazon as one of your party members during your adventures. In the Megami Tensei games, deities and supernatural entities from all of the world's religions/mythologies, past and present, simultaneously co-exist--an example of tolerance that humanity could stand to learn from.

Atlus lumped the Amazons in with their other female Neutral Chaos entities (the equivalent of Dungeons & Dragons "Chaotic Neutral" alignment, so, in other words, women that are neither good nor evil, but unpredictable and self-serving), a group which they dubbed the "Kijo" (the Japanese kanji for said term translates as "demoness", "witch", "ogress", or "she-devil", and the word can also be used as an insult). Kijo in the case of the Amazons is more of a reference to their strength and ferocity in battle (not to mention their proclivity for killing men), as they're only mortal after all.

Video gaming nonsense aside, Amazons are the well-known female warriors from Greek mythology. Matriarchal Amazon society reputedly had very little use for men, when they allowed them to survive at all, other than as slaves and/or procreation (depending on your source, Amazon male babies were either killed outright, abandoned in the wilderness, or returned to their fathers). Ancient writers disagree on where the Amazons resided, citing areas in what are now modern Turkey, Iran, Ukraine, and Libya. The meaning of the Amazon moniker is often disputed as well. Some of the proposed origins of the word are the Persian "Hama-zan" (all women), Iranian "Ha-mazan-" (warriors) and "Ama-janah" (virility-killing), Hittite "Am-azzi" (woman of the Azzi), Greek "A-mazos" (without breast), and Tamazight "Amazigh" (another name for the Berbers). While there are many Greco-Roman stories and art pieces devoted to Amazons, there's also very little in the way of scientific evidence that they ever existed. The closest thing anyone has ever found in the way of proof are some graves in Southern Ukraine and Russia where approximately 20% of the Scythian-Sarmation warriors' tombs contained the remains of women with armor and/or weapons, but that's still a far cry from a nation of nothing but militant females. I still believe in them though, after all, a society of warrior women is something that's quite plausible, unlike crazy stuff like centaurs and harpies.

Perhaps the most infamous of Amazon myths is that they intentionally cut off, or burned and cauterized, one of their breasts (usually in infancy) because they supposedly believed that (1) boobs impede a woman's ability to draw a bow and shoot arrows and (2) removing a breast during childhood results in the strength/energy that your body would invest in growing said structure to transfer to the adjacent arm instead, making you a mightier warrior. As most female archers alive today shoot just fine with both of their breasts intact, including the local deer hunters where I live, that's obviously rubbish. And even if breasts did cause problems, it'd be a heck of a lot more practical, not to mention sane, to strap them down then to cut or burn them off! Needless to say, the ancient Greeks weren't always the shining example of enlightenment that historians often champion.

And, no, it's not lost on me that I'm just perpetuating that nonsense further by making a figure of a one-breasted Amazon.


Materials:
Newsprint, tissue paper, white notebook paper, embroidery floss (hair),
elastic string from a sock (bow string), acrylic paint, ink, and white glue.

Dimensions:
4.4 cm (1.7") wide x 4.7 cm (1.9") high.
Excluding the spear and branches, she's 3.6 cm (1.4") tall.

Time:
Three days; May 22-24th, 2016.

Lots more photos and information: http://www.angelfire.com/ult/ace/amazon.html

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