Share Luciana Cavallaro
Share to email
Share to Facebook
Share to X
First optin
Includes gift for subscribers
What do you enjoy reading?
In this episode, I'll be talking about the two women were both faithful followers of their gods and condemned for their actions.
The two females featured in this episode are very different but there was one element they both wanted. The first didn’t realise what she was doing with the wedding gift she was presented by Zeus; the second wanted to help the less fortunate and devoted her life to caring for the poor and infirmed.
In this episode, I talk about Hera, Queen of the Gods and Margaret Thatcher, UK's first female Prime Minister.
Today’s podcast is about two princesses, one mythical and one who rose to mythic prominence. I guess the latter description will depend on how you perceive her and what you’ve read about her in the press. And yes, both are from royalty, though one married into the royal family.
Women, since the dawn of time were scorned, vilified or regarded as ball-busters if they showed strength or scaled through the ranks to CEO. Throughout history, there are examples of women condemned for supposed actions. In this episode, I talk about Helen of Sparta and Mata Hari, two women vilified and blamed for actions of men.
This is the fifth short story in the Accursed Women collection and is about Medousa. I've written the story retrospectively, beginning with Medousa as a gorgon hunted by Perseus and go back in time to when she is a child living with her parents. I wanted to show Medousa as a real person, with siblings, parents and dreams. However, with most ancient Greek legends featuring women, she is vilified and made into a monster as a way for men to blame the female race for their sexual attraction and power.
This is the fourth short story in the Accursed Women collection. Here's a little known fact, the Bishop of Rotterdam, who mistranslated the Greek word for pithos, meaning jar, into pyxis, which means box. The phrase 'Pandora's box' has been incorrect for the last 600 years!
The podcast currently has 15 episodes available.