Goddesses in Everywoman

(avery) #1

Mothers, effects of on young goddess archetypes. See Parents
Mother’s daughter, Persephone woman as, 200


Ms. magazine, 50
My Fair Lady, 231
Myrrha, 257; myth of, 236–237
Myths and mythology: Adonis, 199, 221, 236; Aphrodite, 234–235; Arachne,
77; Artemis, 46–49; Atalanta, 7, 72–74, 235, 238, 290, 294; Athena, 76–78;
Calydon Boar, 68–69, 72; Demeter, 169–171; and dreams, 6; Eros and
Psyche, 5–6, 7, 198, 237–238, 258–262, 282, 288, 290, 294; as expressions
of archetypes, 15; Hera, 140–142; Hestia, 107–108; Iphigenia, 70–71; Jason
and the Golden Fleece, 77, 162, 163; judgment of Paris, 263–264; Medea,
162–163; Medusa, 77; Myrrha, 236–237; patriarchy of, 19–21; Persephone,
8, 169–171, 197–199; Phaedra, 237; Pygmalion and Galatea, 224, 232, 236;
use for insight, 5–11


Nammu, 20
Narcissism, in Persephone woman, 217
National Organization for Women (NOW), 3
National Velvet, 57
Near, Holly, 37
Neptune. See Poseidon
Neumann, Erich, 5, 258
Nietzsche, Friedrich, 230
Nina, 20
Ningal, 20
Niobe, 48, 70
Nixon, Richard, 82
Northern California Psychiatric Society, 4
Numinous, dreams as, 145–146
Nut, 20


Odysseus, 76, 77, 198
Odyssey, 264
O’Keeffe, Georgia, 269–270; as Artemis woman, 66
“Old Europe,” 20
Onassis, Aristotle, 95
Onassis, Jacqueline Kennedy, as Athena woman, 95
Oppressed and oppressor, Hera woman as, 160–161
Orderly process, in goddess conflict, 267–270
Orestes, 77, 90


Index
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