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Pandora's Jar: Women in the Greek Myths Pandora's Jar: Women in the Greek Myths by Natalie Haynes
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Pandora's Jar Quotes Showing 1-30 of 82
“When women take up space, there is less available for men. But it means we get a whole story instead of half of one.”
Natalie Haynes, Pandora's Jar: Women in the Greek Myths
“There’s comfort in stories which don’t change, even the sad ones.”
Natalie Haynes, Pandora's Jar: Women in the Greek Myths
“And if history has taught us anything, it is that women making a noise – whether speaking or shouting – tend to be viewed as intrinsically disruptive.”
Natalie Haynes, Pandora's Jar: Women in the Greek Myths
“Every myth contains multiple timelines within itself: the time in which it is set, the time it is first told, and every retelling afterwards. Myths may be the home of the miraculous, but they are also mirrors of us. Which version of a story we choose to tell, which characters we place in the foreground, which ones we allow to fade into the shadows: these reflect both the teller and the reader, as much as they show the characters of the myth. We have made space in our storytelling to rediscover women who have been lost or forgotten. They are not villains, victims, wives and monsters: they are people.”
Natalie Haynes, Pandora's Jar: Women in the Greek Myths
“For my mum, who has always thought that a woman with an axe was more interesting than a princess”
Natalie Haynes, Pandora's Jar: Women in the Greek Myths
“But these myths are full of violence and we should at least ask why it is the violence against women that is removed in order to make our heroes uncomplicated adventurers.”
Natalie Haynes, Pandora's Jar: Women in the Greek Myths
“Their stories should be read, seen, heard in all their difficult, messy, murderous detail. They aren’t simple, because nothing interesting is simple.”
Natalie Haynes, Pandora's Jar: Women in the Greek Myths
“A beautiful woman whom men find all the more alluring because she is essentially mute? I know, I always think the shock will kill me too.”
Natalie Haynes, Pandora's Jar: Women in the Greek Myths
“But the verb in Pandora’s name is active, not passive: literally she is all-giving rather than all-gifted.”
Natalie Haynes, Pandora's Jar: Women in the Greek Myths
“A name can be in lots of places at once, she replies. A person can’t.”
Natalie Haynes, Pandora's Jar: Women in the Greek Myths
“Medusa wasn't always a monster, Helen of Troy wasn't always an adulterer, Pandora wasn't ever a villain.”
Natalie Haynes, Pandora's Jar: Women in the Greek Myths
“These artists tend to show her in the act of opening either a jar or a box, or being about to do so, or in the immediate aftermath of having done so. Their focus is almost always on the destruction which Pandora has wreaked or will imminently wreak, which is surely a consequence of the mingling of the Pandora and Eve narratives. The emphasis in Pandora’s story for centuries has been her single-handed role in the fall of man. Just as Adam and the snake dodge so much of the blame in Eve’s story, so Zeus, Hermes and Epimetheus have been exonerated in almost every later version of Pandora’s. The guiding principle when searching for the cause of everything wrong in the world has been, all too often: cherchez la femme.”
Natalie Haynes, Pandora's Jar: Women in the Greek Myths
“There is even an opposing theory to the Gaia thesis: that instead of a Mother Earth which nourishes and cherishes us, we instead inhabit a planet that is determined to extinguish us. It is called the Medea hypothesis.”
Natalie Haynes, Pandora's Jar: Women in the Greek Myths
“Amazons – even when one is exceptional – are a team, a tribe, a gang, and it is this which Buffy captured so perfectly: an ensemble of women fighting to save us all.”
Natalie Haynes, Pandora's Jar: Women in the Greek Myths
“The message is simple: women are stronger together than apart, even ones with superpowers.”
Natalie Haynes, Pandora's Jar: Women in the Greek Myths
“When the question arises – why retell greek myths with women at their core? – it is loaded with a strange assumption. The underpinning belief is that women are and always have been on the margins of these stories. That the myths have always focused on men and that women have only ever been minor figures. This involves ignoring the fact that there is no ‘real’ or ‘true’ version of any myth, because they arise from multiple authors across multiple locations over a long period.”
Natalie Haynes, Pandora's Jar: Women in the Greek Myths
“Euripides was an astonishing writer of women. He wrote more and better female roles than almost any other male playwright who has ever lived.”
Natalie Haynes, Pandora's Jar: Women in the Greek Myths
“Yet, in my heart of hearts, I know I have never in my life wanted to eat anything so much as a sachet of silica gel, on which someone has stamped the words ‘Do Not Eat’.”
Natalie Haynes, Pandora's Jar: Women in the Greek Myths
“Pandora’s role as the ancestor of all women was far more important than her disputed role in opening the world to incessant evil. Even if, for Hesiod, these two amount to much the same thing.”
Natalie Haynes, Pandora's Jar: Women in the Greek Myths
“Hope is intrinsically positive in English, but in Greek (and the same with the Latin equivalent, spes) it is not. Since it really means the anticipation of something good or bad, a more accurate translation would probably be ‘expectation’. Before we can worry about whether it’s advantageous to us that it remains in the jar, we first have to decide if it is intrinsically good or bad. This is a genuinely complex linguistic and philosophical puzzle. No wonder it’s easier to just blame Pandora.”
Natalie Haynes, Pandora's Jar: Women in the Greek Myths
“If you hurt her, she will make you regret it. Her revenge will exceed your original wrong and no one will ever be able to say of her that she let her enemies get away with something.”
Natalie Haynes, Pandora's Jar: Women in the Greek Myths
“There are two things to note about this: the first is that in every version of her story, Jocasta becomes a more complex, more rounded character with every word she says. In Oedipus Tyrannos, we get a fairly slender portrait of a woman whose life is entirely dictated by the decisions of men. In The Phoenician Women, we finally hear her talk about what that means and how it feels. And here, in the earlier fragment of the Lille Stesichorus, we have a strong political leader, negotiating with warring parties who happen to be her sons.”
Natalie Haynes, Pandora's Jar: Women in the Greek Myths
“When people ask why tell the stories that we know best from the Odyssey from Penelope’s perspective, or Circe’s perspective, they presuppose that the story ‘should’ be told from Odysseus’ point of view. Which means the answer to this question should always be: because she’s in the damn story. Why wouldn’t we want to hear from her?”
Natalie Haynes, Pandora's Jar: Women in the Greek Myths
“The failure of his mission is assured from the moment he undertakes it. There is something cripplingly true about this, isn’t there? That we are so often the authors of our own misfortunes because of the same qualities which makes us brave, or hopeful, or loving in the first place. This Orpheus hasn’t been gripped by madness, he has been afflicted by fear. And because the fear eventually overwhelms him, the thing he feared comes true.”
Natalie Haynes, Pandora's Jar: Women in the Greek Myths
“Every myth contains multiple timelines within itself: the time in which it is set, the time it is first told, and every retelling afterwards.”
Natalie Haynes, Pandora's Jar: Women in the Greek Myths
“While we might say that we have fallen in love or developed a crush on someone unsuitable, the Greeks tended to externalize the causes of such experiences. We fall in love, they were struck by an arrow shot by the god Eros, for example. A sophisticated language of psychology simply didn’t exist at the time that Euripides was writing, so things which are internalized for us were often launched upon a Greek from without.”
Natalie Haynes, Pandora's Jar: Women in the Greek Myths
“Still, Hermes says, 'But here's the thing/To know how it ends/And still begin to sing it again/As if it might turn out this time.' There's comfort in the stories which don't change, even the sad ones.”
Natalie Haynes, Pandora's Jar: Women in the Greek Myths
“Indeed, we’re hard-pushed to find an asexual depiction of Medusa in contemporary culture, although The Lego Movie manages it beautifully, if briefly.45 Her Lego snake hair is particularly good.”
Natalie Haynes, Pandora's Jar: Women in the Greek Myths
“In perhaps one of the greatest digital curatorial comments in any museum in the world, the Cleveland Museum of Art website used to list the description of the pot – ‘Here Medea flees the scene after murdering her children on a flying serpent-pulled chariot’ – under the heading, ‘Fun Fact’.45 I salute this curator.”
Natalie Haynes, Pandora's Jar: Women in the Greek Myths
“It is the ultimate story about the power of music to change hearts and minds.”
Natalie Haynes, Pandora's Jar: Women in the Greek Myths

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