S1E10: Out of Pandora’s Box, Recovering Hope

 
 

With Dr. Deborah Lyons

On the Season 1 finale we talk with Dr. Deborah Lyons about ancient Greek myths, breaking cultural boxes, and why we should all strive to be killjoys. Pandora’s box, Penelope’s gifts, Helen’s beauty in Sappho’s poetry, and more.

Why does it matter that Pandora didn’t actually have a box in the earliest versions of the myth? How were objects and the practice of gift-giving gendered in Classical Greece? What rituals did Ancient Greek women participate in, and what did they produce? As we study ancient women, what strategies can we turn to for unearthing hope?

 
I often read the Pandora story along with the story of Eve in my myth classes, and I make a similar argument there which is that without women men would never enter into history. They would just continue to live kind of undifferentiated life where they have a cozy relationship with divinity but nothing ever happens.
— Dr. Deborah Lyons


BIO

Dr. Deborah Lyons is an Associate Professor of Classics at Miami University (Oxford, OH). Deborah holds degrees from Wesleyan University and Princeton University, where she earned a PhD in Classics. She has also studied at the Intercollegiate Center for Classical Studies in Rome, the American School of Classical Studies at Athens, and the University of Heidelberg. 

Deborah works on gender in antiquity—especially in myth and literature. She also brings her expertise to Greek archaic and classical poetry, religion, and anthropological approaches to the study of antiquity. She has published extensively and won fellowships from the National Humanities Center and Harvard’s The Center for Hellenic Studies. Some of her books include: Gender and Immortality: Heroines in Ancient Greek Myth and Cult (1997), Women and Property in Ancient Mediterranean and Near Eastern Societies with Raymond Westbrook (2005), and Dangerous Gifts: Gender and Exchange in Ancient Greece (2013)

 
 

Episode Cover Art

This decorated clay jar was thrown around the time Hesiod wrote his epic poems Theogony and Works and Days. Like a pithos, this amphora’s wide neck and narrow base would have made it top-heavy. It wouldn’t have needed much help from Pandora to fall over.

Credit: Proto-attic amphora. Greek clay jar painted by the painter of Group of the Wild Style. Ca. 700–650 BCE. National Archaeological Museum, Athens, accession number 15924. Image from Wikimedia Commons.

 

Women Who Went Before is written, produced, and edited by Rebekah Haigh and Emily Chesley. The music is composed and produced by Moses Sun.

Sponsored by the Center for Culture, Society, and Religion, the Program in Judaic Studies, and the Stanley J. Seeger Center for Hellenic Studies at Princeton University.

Views expressed on the podcast are solely those of the individuals, and do not represent Princeton University.

 
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S2E0: Bodily Matters: The Lifecycle of an Ancient Woman

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S1E9: In Her Own Words: Ancient Women Authors