Results for Pandora
On this page:
 
Dictionary:

Pandora

  (păn-dôr'ə, -dōr'ə) pronunciation
n.
  1. Greek Mythology. The first woman, bestowed upon humankind as a punishment for Prometheus's theft of fire. Entrusted with a box containing all the ills that could plague people, she opened it out of curiosity and thereby released all the evils of human life.
  2. The satellite of Saturn that is fourth in distance from the planet.

[Greek Pandōrā, having all gifts : pan-, pan- + dōron, gift.]


 
 

In Greek mythology, the first woman. After Prometheus stole fire from heaven and bestowed it on mortals, Zeus decided to counteract this blessing and commissioned Hephaestus to fashion a woman out of earth, upon whom the gods bestowed their choicest gifts. After marrying Prometheus's brother, Pandora opened a jar containing all kinds of misery and evil, which escaped and flew out over the earth. In one version, Hope alone remained inside, the lid having been shut before she could escape.

For more information on Pandora, visit Britannica.com.

 

Pandōra, in Greek myth, the first woman; see PROMETHEUS.

 

Pandora, a verse play written by Goethe in 1807 in response to a request by L. von Seckendorff (1775-1809) and a Dr Stoll for a contribution to an annual of verse (Musenalmanach) entitled Pandora. Part of Goethe's Pandora was published in the first two instalments of the annual (1808); it was published complete in a special number described as Pandora von Goethe. Ein Taschenbuch für das Jahr 1810.

Pandora uses the myth of Pandora's descent to earth bringing ambiguous gifts, and combines it with the myth of the two Titans Prometheus and Epimetheus. Epimetheus mourns the loss of Pandora and yearns for her return. She has taken with her one daughter, Elpore, who represents hope. A second daughter, Epimeleia, remains with him, and she is loved by Phileros, son of Prometheus. Suspecting her of infidelity, Phileros pursues and wounds her. Epimetheus and Prometheus intervene. Both lovers come close to perishing, she by fire and he by water. As dawn gives way to day, both are rescued and united.

The allegory is concerned with man's loss of powers and resignation in age, counterbalanced by confidence based on the succession of generations. Pandora was originally to include a continuation in which Pandora herself would return, but this remained unwritten, and the proposed title Pandorens Wiederkunft was therefore modified. The work is a product of Goethe's classical period and is written chiefly in iambic trimeters, with interpolated classical lyrical measures. The classical mood is also emphasized by the scenic description ‘im großen Stil nach Poussinischer Weise’.

 
in Greek mythology
in astronomy

(păndôr'ə), in Greek mythology, first woman on earth. Zeus ordered Hephaestus to create her as vengeance upon man and his benefactor, Prometheus. The gods endowed her with every charm, together with curiosity and deceit. Zeus sent her as a wife to Epimetheus, Prometheus' simple brother, and gave her a box that he forbade her to open. Despite Prometheus' warnings, Epimetheus allowed her to open the box and let out all the evils that have since afflicted man. Hope alone remained inside the box.

Pandora (păndôr'ə) , in astronomy, one of the named moons, or natural satellites, of Saturn. Also known as Saturn XVII (or S17), Pandora is an irregularly shaped (nonspherical) body measuring about 71 mi (114 km) by 52 mi (84 km) by 38 mi (62 km); it orbits Saturn at a mean distance of 88,050 mi (141,700 km) and has an orbital period of 0.6285 earth days. The rotational period is unknown but is assumed to be the same as the orbital period. It was discovered by a team led by S. Collins in 1980 from an examination of photographs taken by Voyager 1 during its flyby of Saturn. Pandora is more heavily cratered—with at least two of the craters being more than 18 mi (30 km) in diameter—than the nearby moon Prometheus but exhibits neither linear ridges nor valleys. Pandora is the outer shepherd satellite (a moon that limits the extent of a planetary ring through gravitational forces) of Saturn's F ring.


 
Wikipedia: Pandora
"The Creation of "[A]NESIDORA" on a white-ground kylix by the Tarquinia Painter, ca 460 BCE (British Museum
Enlarge
"The Creation of "[A]NESIDORA" on a white-ground kylix by the Tarquinia Painter, ca 460 BCE (British Museum

In Greek mythology, Pandora was the first woman. Each god helped create her by giving her unique gifts. Zeus ordered her creation as a punishment for mankind, in retaliation for Prometheus' having stolen fire and then giving it to humans for their use. She is most famous for carrying a jar (pithos) (or box) containing all the world's evils. She releases these evils, but closes the lid before Hope can escape.

The myth according to Hesiod: the Theogony

The Pandora myth first appears in lines 560-612 of Hesiod's (ca. 8th-7th centuries BC) epic poem, the Theogony. After humans received the gift of fire from Prometheus, an angry Zeus decided to give men another gift to compensate for the boon they had been given. He commands Hephaestus to create the first woman, a "beautiful evil" whose descendants would torment the race of men. After Hephaestus does so, Zeus' daughter Athena dressed her in a silvery gown, a broidered veil, garlands and an ornate crown of gold. This woman goes unnamed in the Theogony, but is presumably Pandora, whose myth Hesiod would revisit. When she first appears before gods and mortals, "wonder seized them" as they looked upon her. But she was "sheer guile, not to be withstood by men." Hesiod elaborates (590-93):

From her is the race of women and female kind:
of her is the deadly race and tribe of women who
live amongst mortal men to their great trouble,
no helpmeets in hateful poverty, but only in wealth.

Hesiod goes on to lament that men who try to avoid the evil of women by avoiding marriage will fare no better (604-7):

He reaches deadly old age without anyone to tend his years,
and though he at least has no lack of livelihood while he lives,
yet, when he is dead, his kinsfolk divide his possessions amongst them.

Hesiod concedes that occasionally a man finds a good wife, but still (609) "evil contends with good."

The myth continued: Works and Days

The more famous version of the Pandora myth comes from another of Hesiod's poems, the Works and Days. In this version of the myth (lines 60-105), Hesiod expands upon her origin, and morever widens the scope of the misery she inflicts on mankind. As before, she is created by Hephaestus, but now more gods contribute to her completion (63-82): Athena taught her needlework and weaving (63-4); Aphrodite "shed grace upon her head and cruel longing and cares that weary the limbs" (65-6); Hermes gave her "a shameful mind and deceitful nature" (67-8); Hermes also gave her the power of speech, putting in her "lies and crafty words" (77-80) ; Athena then clothed her (72); next she, Persuasion and the Charites adorned her with necklaces and other finery (72-4); the Horae adorned her with a garland crown (75). Finally, Hermes gives this woman a name: Pandora -- "All-gifted" -- "because all the Olympians gave her a gift" (81).[1] In this retelling of her story, Pandora's deceitful feminine nature becomes the least of mankinds' worries. For she brings with her a jar[2] containing[3] "burdensome toil and sickness that brings death to men" (91-2), diseases (102) and "a myriad other pains" (100). Prometheus had (fearing further reprisals) warned his brother Epimetheus not to accept any gifts from Zeus. But Epimetheus did not listen; he accepted Pandora, who promptly scattered the contents of her jar. As a result, Hesiod tells us, "the earth and sea are full of evils" (101). One item, however, did not escape the jar (96-9):

Only Forsight was left within her unbreakable house,
she remained under the lip of the jar, and did not
fly away. Before [she could], Pandora replaced the
lid of the jar. This was the will of aegis-bearing
Zeus the Cloudgatherer.

Hesiod closes with this moral (105): "Thus it is not possible to escape the mind of Zeus."

Later embellishments

Later mythographers would fill in minor details or add postscripts to Hesiod's account. For example, Apollodorus and Hyginus each make explicit what might be latent in the Hesiodic text: Epimetheus and Pandora were married. They each add that they had a daughter, Pyrrha, who married Deucalion, son of Prometheus. "Pandora" was named as a daughter-in-law of Noah in writings attributed to the Chaldean historian of the 3rd century BC, Berossus, by the 15th century monk Annio da Viterbo, but this is now widely regarded as a forgery.

In a major departure from Hesiod, the 6th-century Greek elegiac poet Theognis tells us:

Hope is the only good god remaining among mankind;
the others have left and gone to Olympus.
Trust, a mighty god has gone, Restraint has gone from men,
and the Graces, my friend, have abandoned the earth.
Men’s judicial oaths are no longer to be trusted, nor does anyone
revere the immortal gods; the race of pious men has perished and
men no longer recognize the rules of conduct or acts of piety.

Theognis seems to be hinting at a myth in which the jar contained blessings rather than evils. In this, he appears to follow a possibly pre-Hesiodic tradition (preserved by the 2nd-century AD fabulist Barbrius) that the gods sent a jar containing blessings to humans. A "foolish man" (not Pandora) opened the jar, and most of the blessings were lost forever. Only hope remained, "to promise each of us the good things that fled." that the story of Pandora and her jar is from a pre-Hesiodic myth, and that this explains the confusion and problems with Hesiod's version and its inconclusiveness. M.L. West writes that in earlier myths, Pandora was married to Prometheus, and cites the ancient Catalogue of Women as preserving this older tradition, and that the jar may have at one point contained only good things for mankind. He also writes that it may have been that Epimetheus and Pandora and their roles were transposed in the pre-Hesiodic myths, a "mythic inversion". He remarks that there is a curious correlation between Pandora being made out of earth in Hesiod's story, to what is in Apollodorus that Prometheus created man from water and earth. (Apollodorus, Library and Epitome, ed. Sir James George Frazer.[1] )[4] Hesiod's myth of Pandora's jar, then, could be a amalgam of many variant myths.

The difficulties of interpretation

In Hesiodic scholarship, the interpretive crux has endured: Is Hope's imprisonment inside the jar a benefit for mankind, or a further bane? A number of mythology textbooks echo the sentiments of M.L. West: "[Hope's retention in the jar] is comforting, and we are to be thankful for this antidote to our present ills."[5] Some scholars such as Mark Griffith, however, take the opposite view: "[Hope] seems to be a blessing withheld from men so that their life should be the more dreary and depressing."[6] One's interpretation hangs on two related questions: First, how are we to render elpis, the Greek word usually translated as "hope"? Second, does the jar preserve Elpis for men, or keep Elpis away from men?

The first question might confuse the non-specialist. But as with most ancient Greek words, elpis can be translated a number of ways. A number of scholars prefer the neutral translation of "expectation." But expectation of what? Classical authors use the word elpis to mean "expectation of bad," as well as "expectation of good." Statistical analysis demonstrates that the latter sense appears five times more than the former in all of ancient Greek literature.[7] Others hold the minority view that elpis should be rendered, "expectation of evil" (vel sim.).[8]

How one answers the first question largely depends on the answer to the second question: should we interpret the jar to function as a prison, or a pantry?[9] The jar certainly serves as a prison for the evils that Pandora released -- they only affect mankind once outside the jar. Some have argued that logic dictates, therefore, that the jar acts as a prison for Elpis as well, withholding it from men.[10] If one takes elpis to mean expectant hope, then the myth's tone is pessimistic: All the evils in the world were scattered from Pandora's jar, while the one potentially mitigating force -- Hope -- remains locked securely inside.[11]

This interpretation raises yet another question, complicating the debate: are we to take Hope in an absolute sense, or in a narrow sense where we understand Hope to mean hope only as it pertains to the evils released from the jar? If Hope is imprisoned in the jar, does this mean that human existence is utterly hopeless? This is the most pessimistic reading possible for the myth. A less pessimistic interpretation (still pessimistic, to be sure) understands the myth to say: countless evils fled Pandora's jar and plague human existence; the hope that we might be able to master these evils remains imprisoned inside the jar. Life is not hopeless, but each of us is hopelessly human.[12]

An objection to the hope is good/the jar is a prison interpretation counters that, if the jar is full of evils, then what is expectant hope -- a blessing -- doing among them? This objection leads some to render elpis as the expectation of evil, which would make the myth's tone somewhat optimistic: although humankind is troubled by all the evils in the world, at least we are spared the continual expectation of evil, which would make life unbearable.[13]

Seemingly the most popular interpretation is the optimistic reading of the myth expressed (e.g.) by M.L. West. Elpis takes the more common meaning of expectant hope. And while the jar served as a prison for the evils that escaped, it thereafter serves as a residence for Hope. West explains, "It would be absurd to represent either the presence of ills by their confinement in a jar or the presence of hope by its escape from one."[14] Hope is thus preserved as a benefit for humans.[15]

All-giving Pandora: a mythic inversion

The etymology of Pandora's name provided in Works and Days is an incorrect folk etymology. Pandora properly means "all-giving" rather than "all-gifted." An alternate name for Pandora attested on a white-ground kylix (ca. 460 BC) is Anesidora, which similarly means "she who sends up gifts." The vase painting clearly depicts Hephastus and Athena putting the finishing touches on the first woman, as in the Theogony. Written above this figure (a convention in Greek vase painting) is the name Anesidora. More commonly, however, the epithet anesidora is applied to Gaea or Demeter.

This connection of Pandora to Gaea and Demeter through the name Anesidora provides a clue as to Pandora's evolution as a mythic figure. In classical scholarship it is generally posited that -- for female deities in particular -- one or more secondary mythic entities sometimes "splinter off" (so to speak) from a primary entity, assuming aspects of the original in the process. The most famous example of this is the putative division of all the aspects of the so-called Great Goddess into a number of goddesses with more specialized functions -- Gaea, Demeter, Persephone, Artemis and Hecate among them. Pandora appears to be just such a product of this process. In a previous incarnation now lost to us, Pandora/Anesidora would have taken on aspects of Gaea and Demeter. She would embody the fertility of the earth and its capacity to bear grain and fruits for the benefit of humankind.[16] Jane Ellen Harrison[17] turned to the repertory of vase-painters to shed light on aspects of myth that were left unaddressed or disguised in literature. The story of Pandora was repeated on Greek ceramics. On a fifth century amphora in the Ashmolean Museum (her fig.71) the half-figure of Pandora emerges from the ground, her arms upraised in the epiphany gesture, to greet Epimetheus.[18] A winged ker with a fillet hovers overhead: "Pandora rises from the earth; she is the Earth, giver of all gifts," Harrison observes.

Over time this "all-giving" goddess somehow devolved into an "all-gifted" mortal woman. T. A. Sinclair, commenting on Works and Days[19] argues that Hesiod shows no awareness of the mythology of such a divine "giver". A.H. Smith[20], however, notes that in Hesiod's account Athena and the Seasons brought wreaths of grass and spring flowers to Pandora, indicating that Hesiod was conscious of Pandora's original "all-giving" function. Jane Ellen Harrison sees in Hesiod's story "evidence of a shift from matriarchy to patriarchy in Greek culture. As the life-bringing goddess Pandora is eclipsed, the death-bringing human Pandora arises."[21] Thus Harrison concludes "in the patriarchal mythology of Hesiod her great figure is strangely changed and diminished. She is no longer Earth-Born, but the creature, the handiwork of Olympian Zeus." (Harrison, p 284)Robert Graves, quoting Harrison, [22] asserts that "Pandora is not a genuine myth, but an anti-feminist fable, probably of his own invention."

The Hesiodic myth did not, however, completely obliterate the memory of the all-giving goddess Pandora. A scholium to line 971 of Aristophanes' The Birds mentions a cult "to Pandora, the earth, because she bestows all things necessary for life". Certain vase paintings dated to the 5th century BC likewise indicate that the myth of the goddess Pandora endured for centuries after the time of Hesiod.

Feminist interpretations of Pandora's jar

Nicolas Régnier, c. 1626, is aware it should be Pandora's jar, not box
Enlarge
Nicolas Régnier, c. 1626, is aware it should be Pandora's jar, not box

The myth's misogyny is apparent in the transformation of a goddess who gives all good things to men into a mortal woman both intrinsically evil and who moreover introduces every conceivable evil to mankind. Modern feminist literary criticism has also focused on the gendered symbolism inherent in the myth. Pandora's jar, according to this school of thought, represents the female womb. That the jar releases a myriad evils upon the earth suggests the phallocentric culture's unease with female sexuality.[23]

Pithos into "box"

A pithos from Crete, ca. 675 BC. Louvre.
Enlarge
A pithos from Crete, ca. 675 BC. Louvre.
An Attic pyxis, 440-430 BC. British Museum.
Enlarge
An Attic pyxis, 440-430 BC. British Museum.

The mistranslation of pithos as "box" is usually attributed to the sixteenth century humanist Erasmus of Rotterdam when he translated Hesiod's tale of Pandora. Hesiod uses the word "pithos" which refers to a jar used to store grain. Erasmus, however, translated pithos into the Latin word pyxis, meaning "box".[24] The phrase "Pandora's box" has endured ever since.

Notes

  1. ^ As we often find in Greek mythology, this is a folk etymology and thus inaccurate. In Greek, Pandora's name has an active rather than a passive meaning; hence, Pandora properly means "All-giving." The implications of this mistranslation are explored in "All-giving Pandora: mythic inversion?" below.
  2. ^ A pithos is a very large jar, usually made of rough-grained terra cotta, used for storage.
  3. ^ Contra M.L. West, Works and Days, p.168. "Hesiod omits to say where the jar came from, and what Pandora had in mind when she opened it, and what exactly it contained". West goes on to say this contributes to the "inconclusive Pandora legend".
  4. ^ M.L. West, Works and Days, p.164.
  5. ^ As he puts it in his 1978 commentary ad 96.
  6. ^ In his 1983 commentary ad PV 250.
  7. ^ Leinieks 1984, 1-4.
  8. ^ E.g., Verdenius 1985; Blumer 2001.
  9. ^ The prison/pantry terminology comes from Verdenius 1985 ad 96.
  10. ^ Scholars holding this view (e.g., Walcot 1961, 250) point out that the jar is termed an "unbreakable" (in Greek: arrektos) house. In Greek literature (e.g., Homer, and elsewhere in Hesiod), the word arrektos is applied to structures meant to sequester or otherwise restrain its contents.
  11. ^ See Griffith 1984 above.
  12. ^ Thus Athanassakis 1983 in his commentary ad Works 96.
  13. ^ See n. 8
  14. ^ West 1988, 169-70.
  15. ^ Taking the jar to serve as a prison at some times and as a pantry at others will also accommodate another pessimistic interpretation of the myth. In this reading, attention is paid to the phrase moune Elpis -- "only Hope," or "Hope alone." A minority opinion construes the phrase instead to mean "empty Hope" or "baseless Hope": not only are humans plagued by a multitude of evils, but they persist in the fruitless hope that things might get better. Thus Beall 1989 227-28.
  16. ^ Hence, possibly, the variant myth that Pandora's jar contained blessings for mankind.
  17. ^ Harrison, Prolegomena 1922, pp 280-83.
  18. ^ Compare the rising female figure, identified as Aphrodite, on the "Ludovisi Throne".
  19. ^ Sinclair, editor, Hesiod: Works and Days (London: Macmillan) 1932:12.
  20. ^ Smith, "The Making of Pandora" The Journal of Hellenic Studies 11 (1890, pp. 278-283), p 283.
  21. ^ William E. Phipps, "Eve and Pandora contrasted" Theology Today 45 on-line text
  22. ^ Harrison, Prolegomena to the Study of Greek Religion (1903) 1922:283-85 quoted in Graves, The Greek Myths (1955) 1960, sect.39.8 p 148.
  23. ^ See, for example, Reeder 1995, 195-99 and 277-279; Zeitlin 1995 passim, but particularly the chapter on Pandora: "Signifying Difference: The Case of Hesiod's Pandora." For an extensive bibliography on women in ancient Greek myth and society, see the list of references compiled by John Porter: http://homepage.usask.ca/~jrp638/Biblios/Womenindrama.html
  24. ^ The scholar M.L. West has written that Erasmus may have confused the story of Pandora with the story found elsewhere of a box which was opened by Psyche.

References

  • Athanassakis, A. Hesiod: Theogony, Works and Days, Shield (New York 1983).
  • Beall, E. "The Contents of Hesiod's Pandora Jar: Erga 94-98," Hermes 117 (1989) 227-30.
  • Jane Ellen Harrison, Prolegomena to the Study of Greek Religion (1903) 1922, pp 280-85.
  • Griffith, Mark. Aeschylus Prometheus Bound Text and Commentary (Cambridge 1983).
  • Hesiod, Works and Days On-line text.
  • Leinieks, V. "Elpis in Hesiod, Works and Days 96," Philologus 128 (1984) 1-8.
  • Moore, Clifford H. The Religious Thought of the Greeks, 1916.
  • Nilsson, Martin P. History of Greek Religion, 1949.
  • Pucci, Pietro. Hesiod and the Language of Poetry, 1977.
  • Smith, William, Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology, 1870, sub "Pandora" On-line text
  • William Smith, Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology (1870) vol I:177, sub "Anesidora" "Spender" is a misprint of "sender", often repeated.
  • Verdenius, W. A Commentary on Hesiod Works and Days vv 1-382 (Leiden 1985).
  • West, M.L. Hesiod, Theogony, ed. with prolegomena and commentary (Oxford 1966).
  • -- Hesiod, Works and Days, ed. with prolegomena and commentary (Oxford 1978).
  • -- Hesiod, Theogony, and Works and Days (Oxford 1988).
  • Zeitlin, Froma. Playing the Other: Gender and Society in Classical Greek Literature (Princeton 1995).

External links


 
Translations: Pandora

Dansk (Danish)
n. - Pandora

idioms:

  • pandora's box    Pandoras æske

Nederlands (Dutch)
Pandora

Français (French)
n. - Pandore

idioms:

  • pandora's box    boîte de Pandore

Deutsch (German)
n. - Pandora

idioms:

  • pandora's box    Büchse der Pandora

Ελληνική (Greek)
n. - (μυθολ.) Πανδώρα

idioms:

  • pandora's box    (μυθολ.) η πυξίδα/το κουτί της Πανδώρας

Italiano (Italian)
Pandora

idioms:

  • pandora's box    scatola di Pandora

Português (Portuguese)
n. - Pandora (f)

idioms:

  • pandora's box    caixa de Pandora (f)

Русский (Russian)
Пандора

idioms:

  • pandora's box    ящик Пандоры

Español (Spanish)
n. - Pandora

idioms:

  • pandora's box    la caja de Pandora

Svenska (Swedish)
n. - Pandora (grek. myt.)

中文(简体) (Chinese (Simplified))
潘朵拉

idioms:

  • pandora's box    潘多拉盒子

中文(繁體) (Chinese (Traditional))
n. - 潘朵拉

idioms:

  • pandora's box    潘多拉盒子

한국어 (Korean)
n. - 판도라

日本語 (Japanese)
n. - パンドラ

العربيه (Arabic)
‏(الاسم) بنديرة, صندوق, علبه بنديرة, أله موسيقيه تشبه القيثارة‏

עברית (Hebrew)
n. - ‮פנדורה (כלי נגינה עתיק)‬


 
Best of the Web: Pandora

Some good "Pandora" pages on the web:


Greek Mythology
www.pantheon.org
 
 
 

Join the WikiAnswers Q&A community. Post a question or answer questions about "Pandora" at WikiAnswers.

 

Copyrights:

Dictionary. The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition Copyright © 2007, 2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Updated in 2007. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.  Read more
Britannica Concise Encyclopedia. Britannica Concise Encyclopedia. © 2006 Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
Classical Literature Companion. The Concise Oxford Companion to Classical Literature. Copyright © 1993, 2003 by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.  Read more
German Literature Companion. The Oxford Companion to German Literature. Copyright © 1976, 1986, 1997, 2005 by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.  Read more
Columbia Encyclopedia. The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright © 2003, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Columbia University Press. All rights reserved. www.cc.columbia.edu/cu/cup/  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Pandora" Read more
Translations. Copyright © 2007, WizCom Technologies Ltd. All rights reserved.  Read more

On this page:   E-mail   print Print  Link  

 

Keep Reading

Mentioned In: