In Walks a Woman

77. Eve Invents Sex: John Milton’s PARADISE LOST (S6E4)

59 min · I går
episode 77. Eve Invents Sex: John Milton’s PARADISE LOST (S6E4) cover

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Eve as seductress is a cliche. That would make more sense if it were actually in the story about her.  People realizing they are naked does not = having sex like bunnies. Sorry guys (and we do mean guys), but there is no sex in the Genesis story.  In this episode, we’ll tell you about John Milton, mid-to-late 17th century biblical scholar, who wrote a landmark narrative poem, PARADISE LOST (1667).  It’s mostly about Satan falling from grace, but in Satan’s many adventures, he squeezes in a stop by the Garden of Eden to stir up trouble.  Milton takes some ideas from other (male) biblical scholars and spins some sexy ideas of his own in this massively (x1000) influential work of English literature.  And one of those ideas is that after eating the fruit, Eve and Adam lay right down and have the first sex ever. Fan fiction, anyone?  What you might find, after hearing this episode, is that some of the ideas you have associated with Eve come from THIS poem, NOT the Bible.  That’s how powerful stories work:  they infiltrate, and at some point, we’re not even sure how they infiltrated our sense of reality–but they have.  Along the way, Sonja susses out some birthing metaphors, and Vanessa gives Paradise Lost an environmentalist read.  REFERENCES: Feel brave?  Check out Paradise Lost [https://www.yorku.ca/earmstro/text/ParadiseLostBk1.pdf] for yourself. Eve’s story is in Book 9. If you want to look at a footnoted text, this link will take you right to Book 9 at the John Milton Reading Room at Dartmouth [https://milton.host.dartmouth.edu/reading_room/pl/book_9/text.shtml] site. Here is a link to John Milton’s Sonnet 19 [https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poems/44750/sonnet-19-when-i-consider-how-my-light-is-spent] that starts, “When I consider how my light is spent.”

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episode 77. Eve Invents Sex: John Milton’s PARADISE LOST (S6E4) artwork

77. Eve Invents Sex: John Milton’s PARADISE LOST (S6E4)

Eve as seductress is a cliche. That would make more sense if it were actually in the story about her.  People realizing they are naked does not = having sex like bunnies. Sorry guys (and we do mean guys), but there is no sex in the Genesis story.  In this episode, we’ll tell you about John Milton, mid-to-late 17th century biblical scholar, who wrote a landmark narrative poem, PARADISE LOST (1667).  It’s mostly about Satan falling from grace, but in Satan’s many adventures, he squeezes in a stop by the Garden of Eden to stir up trouble.  Milton takes some ideas from other (male) biblical scholars and spins some sexy ideas of his own in this massively (x1000) influential work of English literature.  And one of those ideas is that after eating the fruit, Eve and Adam lay right down and have the first sex ever. Fan fiction, anyone?  What you might find, after hearing this episode, is that some of the ideas you have associated with Eve come from THIS poem, NOT the Bible.  That’s how powerful stories work:  they infiltrate, and at some point, we’re not even sure how they infiltrated our sense of reality–but they have.  Along the way, Sonja susses out some birthing metaphors, and Vanessa gives Paradise Lost an environmentalist read.  REFERENCES: Feel brave?  Check out Paradise Lost [https://www.yorku.ca/earmstro/text/ParadiseLostBk1.pdf] for yourself. Eve’s story is in Book 9. If you want to look at a footnoted text, this link will take you right to Book 9 at the John Milton Reading Room at Dartmouth [https://milton.host.dartmouth.edu/reading_room/pl/book_9/text.shtml] site. Here is a link to John Milton’s Sonnet 19 [https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poems/44750/sonnet-19-when-i-consider-how-my-light-is-spent] that starts, “When I consider how my light is spent.”

Yesterday59 min
episode 76.  Erasing Eve:  Shakespeare’s THE TEMPEST (S6E3) artwork

76.  Erasing Eve:  Shakespeare’s THE TEMPEST (S6E3)

No fruit.  No talking snake.  No woman breaking rules.   So why is THE TEMPEST in the All About Eve season?  For starters, in this 1612 play, we do have an old, powerful, white guy in charge of an idyllic island.  His name is Prospero and he happens to be a sorcerer who can control the weather, puts others into magical slumbers, make people bring him firewood, but most of all, he completely controls the only female character on stage. If a man with magical powers controls you completely, how can you ask questions and explore?  How can you be Eve?  Perhaps that’s the goal… Beyond that, THE TEMPEST demonstrates an early exploration of how to approach the “New World.”  It’s a great example of Shakespeare basing a story on something akin to a newspaper headline in the early 17th century.  Along the way, Sonja says cannibalism as many times as she can, and Vanessa switches a C for T.  REFERENCES: Roanoke Colony Story [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roanoke_Colony] explained here. Here’s some basic information about the Virginia Colony [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Colony_of_Virginia] Jamestown Settlement 1607 information here [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jamestown,_Virginia] Smithsonian account of cannibalism [https://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/starving-settlers-in-jamestown-colony-resorted-to-cannibalism-46000815/] in Jamestown. Here is information about the ship wreck of the Sea Venture [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sea_Venture] We reference our episode #57 on MUCH ADO, which you can find here. [https://open.spotify.com/episode/7iyzUcdvcvlGsv4IfgxXk1] Here is Michel de Montaigne essay, "Of Cannibals" [https://web2.qatar.cmu.edu/~breilly2/odyssey/Montaigne.pdf]

26. juni 20261 h 5 min
episode 75.   Eve as Origin Story in CASSANDRA SPEAKS with Elizabeth Lesser (S6E2) artwork

75.   Eve as Origin Story in CASSANDRA SPEAKS with Elizabeth Lesser (S6E2)

Have you read CASSANDRA SPEAKS? If not, run to your local bookstore and get a copy! It will change how you see the worl In this interview with Elizabeth Lesser, we focus on the Eve story:  what it actually says, what stories have grown out of it, and why.  Beyond Eve, we discuss what impact it's had on the history of the world when about half the population–women–have been cut out of the storytelling.  Can we really reflect humanity as a whole when only half of humanity gets to speak and be heard?    Lesser’s research will enrich you and surprise you.  For example, we think of the fight-or-flight response as a fundamentally “human” response.  But is it?  The first study that introduced that concept used only men as test subjects.  What did scientists find when they studied women?  This episode is about Eve, but CASSANDRA SPEAKS is one of the books that inspired the podcast, so we really hope you join us! EXPORE FURTHER: Elizabeth Lesser’s TED TALKS:   Say Your Truths and Seek Them in Others  [https://www.ted.com/talks/elizabeth_lesser_say_your_truths_and_seek_them_in_others] Take "the Other" to Lunch [https://www.ted.com/talks/elizabeth_lesser_take_the_other_to_lunch] Check out Elizabeth Lesser’s Omega Institute for Holistic Studies [https://www.eomega.org/?gad_source=1&gad_campaignid=23010655561&gbraid=0AAAAAqG_NHXrmBEwv45wAdo0OEmggZ9ma&gclid=Cj0KCQjwrs7RBhDuARIsAIVfBD3WwKs24210UBIF6q8lk_BK4FBdC48IYY3k3_eF0wrBVd9NLJ593voaAhb9EALw_wcB]

19. juni 202656 min
episode 74. All about Eve with Special Guest, Dr. Jana Byars (S6E1) artwork

74. All about Eve with Special Guest, Dr. Jana Byars (S6E1)

One cannot really understand how stories have shaped women’s lives without taking on the story of Eve in Genesis. This episode is the start of our All About Eve season, and this one is close to our hearts:  we’ve wanted to explore the Eve story since the genesis of the pod. Our special guest is medieval scholar, Dr. Jana Byars, and she helps us answer some important questions. What is the original story?  How does Eve handle the serpent’s offer? Why is Eve blamed for tempting Adam when he just pops the fruit in his mouth, no questions asked?   And who adds to the story?  Jana tells us about three rather vocal and opinionated men of the Early Church:  Paul, Tertullian, and Augustine.  How much of their own personalities and life experiences enter into how they revise the Eve story? No matter what your take is on the Bible, the Genesis story of Eve has affected your life. This episode helps us see how the stories men have--quite literally--invented about the OG story have affected our lives, too.  FURTHER EXPLORATION: Jana Byars hosts the New Books Network Podcast, and if you click here [https://newbooksnetwork.com/hosts/profile/08796fea-9b3b-418a-b245-9583f3e27f69] you can find out more about her and her work on the pod. You can also follow Jana @janalena.bluesky.social  If you have a New Yorker subscription, you can read the article Jana mentions by Stephen Greenblatt from 2017: "How St. Augustine Invented Sex" [https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2017/06/19/how-st-augustine-invented-sex] A quote from the article: “He rescued Adam and Eve from obscurity, devised the doctrine of original sin—and the rest is sexual history.” Gerda Lerner's The Creation of Patriarcy [https://www.amazon.com/Creation-Patriarchy-Women-History-V/dp/0195051858/ref=sr_1_1?crid=2LWXZATI9G6SK&dib=eyJ2IjoiMSJ9.W3ZYLvnxX7_4ThSLJ2Ew7Yd7Q3__s2R144KbjLM7ZTZviNSfMeHaLeHKL2EosS1XT5SKan4q7aJNyagdhwyONNRFvqIY-ZOok6P8Pqr8thcy8lWEwPHY24yQDBqCWpGUXgxUjrhIKzX7rm8G24A6_KjteaGH2o7iXnFWET_RLdgDFdmHxu7YbmS6cQD2qPDvyh5p3pjgDRnynd9tvZ0EPeLPcx0YaZPVAu88swDRpGU.vkyBxA5RKgwPXRikOUq7fokLwJKJXT2ohbJv0GvQWks&dib_tag=se&keywords=gerda+lerner&qid=1780793311&sprefix=gerda+lerner%2Caps%2C216&sr=8-1] from 1987 gets mentioned by Sonja, and wow is it worth reading if you want to get an overview. “The virgin book,” Sonja references is one we did an episode on to begin our “Fallen Women” season, S5E1: Like a Virgin [https://open.spotify.com/episode/2wsXBxxkM3yf1zyoiXIhku].  Here [https://www.amazon.com/Virgin-Untouched-History-Hanne-Blank/dp/1596910100/ref=sr_1_1?crid=3GFDPNNDWQ4OO&dib=eyJ2IjoiMSJ9.O7wG3Qh3385e5-e3aaSPWHZolD5Ie7Qwas2fHwUTW_s.A-d6KOAdDBinhrNeJs1K89xjsPrhy2Y5SHITDxp14PQ&dib_tag=se&keywords=virgin+hanne&qid=1780793411&s=books&sprefix=virgin+hanne%2Cstripbooks%2C278&sr=1-1] is a link to the book:  Virgin: The Untouched History (2007) by Hanne Blank. It’s deeply researched, highly readable, and–as you can tell from the title–has a sense of humor. For more on the Eve story as metaphor for a shift over to agrarian civilization, Eve's Seed [https://www.amazon.com/Eves-Seed-Biology-Course-History/dp/0071355286/ref=sr_1_1?crid=5LCCY2LD41G6&dib=eyJ2IjoiMSJ9.G4vyxhqUHERHIOmr2RZUuhE1sQmAdKfFSikTLuoFQ1XhGilOWk33LgYMXvY8Itw94zCuNphgmcGuUBtKGgkcpE6um0KwFhcy0ZSJCgz3Ul9u-071uo6K2E6OVxoenxxHKa-m5QfvWW4S5mpSs3u8fdraVJWwcQUsf6uPrS8JStkIiRbCU1WLwmYuKJfI2chjc8j_4ZOO0wBUPr_zpLl4JuErZ2Xxinn_2O5bRgNvDBI.DsF4mS8r3bu3_5nfKRvDFZsneWRB7MKs71VHbgobJw4&dib_tag=se&keywords=eve%27s+seed&qid=1780793770&sprefix=eve%27s+seed%2Caps%2C240&sr=8-1] (2000) by Robert McElvaine is a fascinating read.  This season, there will be an episode all about John Milton’s sexy take on the Eve story, so that will fill in the gap of John Milton in this episode…believe us, PARADISE LOST and Milton’s WILD version of the Eve story deserves its own episode!

12. juni 20261 h 6 min
episode 73. Falling & Bouncing Back: Gossip Girl with Cecily von Ziegesar / IWAW Author Series (S5E11 ) artwork

73. Falling & Bouncing Back: Gossip Girl with Cecily von Ziegesar / IWAW Author Series (S5E11 )

If you’re gonna do GOSSIP GIRL, you gotta reveal the gossip girl herself:  Cecily von Ziegasar. In her FIRST podcast interview ever (XOXO!!!) Cecily tells IWAW what it was like to write for teens back when no one else was writing for teens. In addition to many personally inspiring experiences, Cecily shares the classic novel that helped her write GOSSIP GIRL.  And guess what?  That 1920 novel features a fallen woman!  In Season 5, we’ve gone from MUCH ADO, in which Hero finds her virginal reputation ruined by gossip, to GOSSIP GIRL, in which characters swim in gossip.  Amidst the constantly changing currents, the girls rise, sink, and swim to the surface again.  Does GOSSIP GIRL demonstrate female resilience?  Does it mean the fallen woman trope has died?  Or does it mean fallen women are society’s main spectacle? This discussion mostly focuses on the book series from the early 2000’s, but we do touch on the television series at several points.  And, yes, we do talk about Chuck Bass…because, well, he’s Chuck Bass. Along the way, Sonja shares a Christmas tradition, and Vanessa & Cecily are rather surprised. You know you love us! XOXO, the IWAW Girls

5. juni 202655 min