『The Story of Circe | Mythology for Sleep Podcast - Greek Mythology Stories from Ancient Greece』のカバーアート

The Story of Circe | Mythology for Sleep Podcast - Greek Mythology Stories from Ancient Greece

The Story of Circe | Mythology for Sleep Podcast - Greek Mythology Stories from Ancient Greece

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She lives alone on an island at the edge of the known world, surrounded by lions and wolves that were once men, weaving at her loom and singing in a voice so beautiful it carries across the water before any ship has a chance to turn back. When Odysseus's crew stumbles onto her shore, they walk toward that singing like men already half-enchanted — because Circe, daughter of the Sun god Helios, does not need a spell to begin her work. She simply needs you to underestimate her. And almost everyone does.Circe occupies a uniquely fascinating position in the ancient Greek imagination. She is not a goddess in the Olympian sense, not a mortal, not quite a monster — she exists in the spaces between categories, which is precisely where the most interesting figures always live. Her father is Helios, the Sun itself. Her mother is the ocean nymph Perse. Her aunt is Pasiphae, mother of the Minotaur. Her niece is Medea, the most formidable sorceress in all of Greek myth. Circe comes from a lineage of women who refused to be contained, and she honors that inheritance completely. As a Greek Mythology Podcasts devoted to recovering the full dimensionality of female figures that ancient sources sometimes flattened, Circe is a character we have been eager to explore for a very long time.She is a woman who was wronged repeatedly by men operating within a world that gave them all the power — and who found, in her art, a way to redistribute that power entirely. This Mythology Explained Podcast episode does not flinch from the gender politics embedded in Circe's story, because they are inseparable from everything that makes her compelling.When Odysseus's men land on Aeaea, Circe's island, she welcomes them with food, wine, and her transformative magic — turning them into pigs with a tap of her wand. It is Odysseus alone, protected by the herb moly given to him by Hermes, who resists the spell and confronts her sword drawn. What happens next is one of the Greek Mythology Stories tradition's most quietly revolutionary moments: Circe, faced with a man she cannot transform, does not double down on hostility.That year on Aeaea is one of the most underexplored chapters in all of Homer, and this Ancient Greece Myths Podcast episode gives it the full attention it deserves. Circe teaches Odysseus things no other figure in his journey can offer. She tells him how to navigate the land of the dead, how to pass the Sirens safely, how to survive Scylla and Charybdis. She is not a villain with a redemption arc. She is a fully realized intelligence who was cast as a villain because she was powerful and solitary and refused to apologize for either. As a Mythology for Sleep Podcast that returns again and again to the quieter, more interior dimensions of these ancient stories, we find the year on Aeaea — its domesticity, its intimacy, its suspended-time quality — among the most dreamlike passages in all of ancient literature.Later traditions deepened Circe further still. In some accounts she bears Odysseus a son, Telegonus, who will one day accidentally kill his own father — weaving Circe's thread into the very end of Odysseus's story as well as its middle. In the rich tradition of Mythology Podcast storytelling, few characters cast as long a shadow across an entire mythological cycle as Circe manages to do from her solitary island at the edge of the world.She has never stopped capturing imaginations. Novelists, poets, painters, and scholars have returned to her across three thousand years of Western culture, each generation finding in her something freshly relevant — the autonomous woman, the dangerous outsider, the healer, the exile, the witch who is wiser than the heroes who fear her. This Greek Mythology Podcasts episode is our love letter to one of antiquity's most enduringly modern figures. Come to the island. The wine is poured. Just be careful what you drink.
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