Pandoras Box Essays

  • Pandora In The Greek Box

    701 Words  | 2 Pages

    has never been before” (Rice, 2015). The story of the goddess Pandora has resonated throughout the world as the woman who betrayed the world; the woman who released disease and famine in the world. Pandora made the fatal mistake of opening a box only because wonder took over her of the fabled jewels and power that might be stored inside. But the mishap led to the world we have today, ravaged by greed and filth. The story of Pandora begins when Zeus condemned Prometheus for giving fire to men.

  • Pandoras Box

    1854 Words  | 4 Pages

    Each of the Greek gods gave her a gift of skill, and aptly named her Pandora, meaning "all gifted." The messenger god, Hermes, with his winged sandals, took Zeus' ghastly creation down to earth, and with her a box given to her by the gods with instructions that it never be opened. One of the gifts that the gods had bestowed upon Pandora was a lively curiosity. After restraining her eagerness to view the contents of the box, Pandora finally lifted the lid and mistakenly released all nature of evil

  • The Myth of Pandora´s Box

    1207 Words  | 3 Pages

    The myth of Pandora’s Box has always been one that has caught my attention. According to The Free Dictionary by Farlex, Pandora’s Box is defined as “a source of extensive but unforeseen troubles or problems,” (Pandora’s+box, Farlex). To me, it is very fascinating to think that one person, Pandora, can be responsible for majority of the evils in the world. Also the controversy between hope being a good thing or a bad thing catches my attention. These are some of the main reasons that I chose this

  • Pandoras Box, And Greek Mythology: Pandora's Box

    783 Words  | 2 Pages

    Don’t open Pandora’s Box; a common phrase derived from Greek Mythology. Pandora’s Box is an artifact relating to Greek Mythology with evil spirits in it. Mythology is the myth of a certain group or culture of supernatural beliefs. Myths normally relate to gods, or supernatural heroes. They are also linked to spiritual and religious beliefs. Myths are generally things that have happened over a period of time in history and the theory or myth has been told over and over. Greek mythology is beliefs

  • Essay On Pandora The Destruction Of Mankind

    1715 Words  | 4 Pages

    Pandora: The Destruction of Mankind In Hesiod’s myths Theogony and Work and Days, the formation of the female species is created. Both myths illustrate how the new female species is the doom for mankind. Pandora is a figure used by Hesiod to explain how females first came to be. Hesiod’s anger and bitterness towards women is seen in both texts. Hesiod perfectly describes his feelings towards females when he says they are evil and a curse for mortal men. Hesiod uses women as a way to explain the

  • Kelly

    575 Words  | 2 Pages

    The name Pandora means “all-gifted”. Pandora is known as the first human women created by the gods. It’s said that she was supposed to be made specifically by Hephaestus and Athena, by the orders of Zeus. Hephaestus was a building god and much like a blacksmith he made weapons for the other gods. Athena was a warrior and she was known as the goddess of wisdom. Even though these two gods were assigned to make her, all the gods pitched in. They made her by casting gifts for her, such as beauty, and

  • Prometheus Research Paper

    1067 Words  | 3 Pages

    Among the many Greek gods, there is the story of Prometheus and Pandora. This particular myth is about the creation of man and how the evils of the world came to be. Prometheus and Epimetheus are brothers, Prometheus being bright and Epimetheus being foolish. Prometheus is the god that goes on a dangerous quest and endures suffering for the betterment of man, namely to bring fire to man. The story starts with Gaia, the goddess who marries the sky and creates the world, bringing forth animals

  • The Greek Nyth Prometheus

    546 Words  | 2 Pages

    enable her to torment mankind. They named her Pandora. Pandora was given a gift of a box filled with all the evils in the world and was told not to open it. What does she do? She opens it. And released all the evils into the world, hope alone remained in the box. Aeschylus, on the other hand, uses the figure of Io as a sweet, innocent woman who was tormented by the gods and whose ancestor will free Prometheus one day. He doesn’t even mention Pandora and the punishment of mankind. Io refused to

  • Pandora And Prometheus Research Paper

    870 Words  | 2 Pages

    English The story of Prometheus and pandora began when Prometheus, the god of war, was assigned with the task of creating mankind. Prometheus had assigned Epimetheus ( his brother) the task of giving the creatures of the earth their various qualities, such as swiftness, cunning, strength, fur, and wings. Unfortunately, by the time he got to man Epimetheus had given all the good qualities out and there were none left for man. So Prometheus decided to make mankind stand upright as the gods did

  • Savagery: Prometheus The Titan

    1211 Words  | 3 Pages

    delicately carved them out of mud and clay, breathing life into each as he finished. To give them warmth and embrace, Prometheus stole a torch of fire from the Olympians and gave it to man. As punishment, Zeus created a beautiful being. Pandora. Zeus gave a jar to Pandora filled with all the terrors and awful things that would inhabit Earth and man’s mind. Among these terrors was one of the worst of all, barbarism and savagery. Prometheus pleaded with Zeus and the gods of Olympus. “Zeus, man has been

  • Pandora's Box By Hesiod

    797 Words  | 2 Pages

    The myth concerning the creation of Pandora and her opening of “Pandora’s box” is one of the etiological stories surrounding the formation of women and their archetypal role in society. Pandora was meant to be a punishment to manhood due to Prometheus’ (Forethought) trickery when he misled Zeus to choose a lesser portion of an ox that was split between him and man, and also when Prometheus stole fire and gave it to mankind without permission. In order to reprimand Prometheus and mankind for their

  • Pandora In Hesiod's Theogony

    1330 Words  | 3 Pages

    Hesiod tells the story of how the curse of Pandora came to be in his writing. In his two works Hesiod, Works and Days and Hesiod, Theogony that contain the story of Pandora are both writing in a slightly different perspective. However, at the end both have the same meaning to them. That Zeus created women as a punishment for men. In developing this meaning in both poems Hesiod uses a few different things in each story as oppose to telling the same story for both. Hesiod, Works and Days and Hesiod

  • My Wonderland

    967 Words  | 2 Pages

    god-mothers for with the way they look after those children not giving them a chance to feel the absence of the much needed ‘mothers-love’ , they deserve to be called nothing else but that. The place is somewhat like the way the world was before Pandora opened the box for it is full of children with glowing faces that reflect nothing but sheer happiness. The truth remains that they have had a horrible past or that they know that they have missed out a lot of things in life but they keep all the pain tucked

  • The Greek Attitude Towards Women as seen in the Works of Hesiod

    722 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Greek Attitude Towards Women as seen in the Works of Hesiod Hesiod leaves no doubt that the existence of women is on balance a terrible thing for men. Zeus ordered Hephaistos to create women as a punishment for his having been decieved.. Women were to be a poisoned gift for men, which "all shall take to their hearts with delight, an evil to love and embrace" (W&D, 57-59). In the Theogony women are called "a great plague" because they are "ill-suited to Poverty’s curse, but suited to Plenty"

  • Icarus: Fraudulent Claim Against His Insurance Company After Setting Fire

    926 Words  | 2 Pages

    Introduction Icarus’ store is facing bankruptcy and so he plans to file a fraudulent claim against his insurance company after setting fire to his own store. In order to do so, he hires Prometheus, an arsonist. Icarus knows there is a risk in burning down a building so he instructs Prometheus to set fire at 2 a.m. expecting no one to be around. Prometheus asked his partner, Daedalus to help set fire. Unfortunately, Prometheus used too much gas creating such a large fire that the lumber yard next

  • Cloning: Opening a Pandora's Box

    600 Words  | 2 Pages

    Cloning: Opening a Pandora's Box What Dolly is to biology can be likened to what nuclear bomb is to physics. And just like the latter, Dolly brings with it a host of controversies. Dolly redefined nature the same way Fat Man and Little Boy redefined warfare in 1945. The impact to the human civilisation is what makes both Dolly and nuclear physics so great, and controversial. It needs not take long for everyone to realise the Pandora's box that Dolly has pried open, even for someone who knows

  • Hesiod’s Theogony

    1326 Words  | 3 Pages

    as king of the gods, providing one of the first characterizations of his temperament, and second, it serves as a mode of explanation for those evils in the world which plague mankind. Caught between the “Birth of the Olympians” and the story of Pandora, lines 509-572 of Theogony, serve as an intermediary to enhance its preceding and subsequent stories. The “Birth of the Olympians” is the first introduction of Zeus into Hesiod’s world, beginning as “Rheia… was about to give birth to Zeus our father…”

  • Heros and Villans in Mary Shelley's Frankenstein

    1650 Words  | 4 Pages

    In the classic horror Frankenstein, Mary Shelley distorts the role of the antagonist and protagonist. By depicting her antagonizing character known simply as the creature or at times the monster as a lonesome unnatural being, reluctantly existing outside of society a sympathy is provoked and the murderous creation though frightening, becomes more of an underdog than a villain. In a similar fashion, Shelley's protagonist the mad scientist Victor Frankenstein, who's ambition to create life artificially

  • Hesiod: Why Pandora Is A Blessing

    515 Words  | 2 Pages

    choose. After Zeus discovered this trickery, he and the other gods put ingredients together to create a woman called Pandora. Pandora is a ‘gift’ to Epimetheus. The poem writes “Prometheus had said to him, bidding him never take a gift of Olympian Zeus, but to send it back for fear it might prove to be something harmful to men,” (Hesiod, Works and Days, 85-90). Just the fact that Pandora practically comes with a warning label as a being harmful shows

  • Prometheus Bound Quotes

    678 Words  | 2 Pages

    Aeschylus’ play Prometheus Bound is a distinct tragedy in the sense that it tells a story in which humans are relived as opposed to being punished. The main character of the play, Prometheus, defies the almighty Zeus by giving humans the gift of fire. Zeus, dissatisfied with the humans, had intended to exterminate them and create and entirely new human race. With his gift, Prometheus is giving the humans an essential tool for their survival and the key to their freedom. Infuriated by the situation