Circe

by

Madeline Miller

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Themes and Colors
Power, Fear, and Self-Preservation Theme Icon
Women, Power, and Misogyny Theme Icon
Change, Initiative, and the Self Theme Icon
Mortality, Fragility, and Fulfillment Theme Icon
Family and Individuality Theme Icon
LitCharts assigns a color and icon to each theme in Circe, which you can use to track the themes throughout the work.
Women, Power, and Misogyny Theme Icon

Circe explores how women cope with a society that sees them as inferior to men. The novel’s protagonist is a nymph named Circe, who experiences ancient Greece’s misogyny firsthand. Nymphs are at the bottom of the gods’ ladder of power and, as women, they are susceptible to violence and abuse from mortal men and immortal gods alike. From a young age, Circe witnesses how women are not expected to hold power—and, if they do, it is almost always through a man. Some women, however, do manage to create their own power to wield autonomously. Circe is one of these women, as she possesses the power of magic. When her capabilities are revealed, she quickly learns that the misogynistic society in which she lives does not welcome women having power. The gods fear her, with Zeus and Helios exiling her in the hopes of containing her. Upon being ejected from the halls of the gods, Circe becomes enmeshed in the lives of mortals and discovers that their attitudes toward powerful women are similar to the gods’; women like her are consistently met with distrust. Consequentially, Circe spends much of her time in isolation, both physically and emotionally. Circe is not unique in her lonely experience as a woman with power. Circe’s niece Medea and sister Pasiphaë, also witches, have similar fates. Through their experiences, the book illustrates how, in a misogynistic society where women rarely possess power of their own, each independently powerful woman faces the world alone.

In ancient Greece, women are at the bottom of the power hierarchy, which limits—if not totally erases—their means to gain power. Although there are a few powerful goddesses, women are largely represented by nymphs. Nymphs are “allowed to work only through the power of others,” which means that any influence is usually gained through marriage. Circe’s mother, Perse, does just this: she entices Helios to marry her so that she may “hold sway in [his] halls.” Women’s value is generally restricted to their sexuality. Parents, such as Perse and Helios, use their daughters as pawns in marriages in order to “trade[] [them] for something better.” In these arranged marriages, the husband sees the wife as just a means to breed children. Circe’s brothers Aeëtes and Perses approach marriage in this way: the former “dispatche[s] [his wife] as soon as she [bears] him an heir” (he kills her), and the latter “has some goddess [...] he keeps in chains.” In this way, women in ancient Greece have no say in their own lives—they are seen only as bearers of children or as sexual objects, and they’re discarded once they can no longer fulfill these prescribed roles. Moreover, the book’s female characters—from the serving girls whom Penelope’s suitors rape to Circe herself—are also vulnerable to male violence. At one point, a sailor learns that Circe lives alone and rapes her—he does not expect consequences if there is no man to punish him.

When women do have power, they are distrusted, and others in power try to constrain them. When Circe and Pasiphaë’s abilities are discovered, Zeus and Helios are afraid of their powers, and they exile Circe to a remote island so that “she can do no more harm.” As for Pasiphaë, the gods figure that her husband Minos “will be sure she is held to her proper place.” Although Perses and Aeëtes also possess magic, no significant attempts are made to constrict their power—presumably because they’re male. Medea is also treated with suspicion. When Aeëtes discovers that Medea has powers, he tries to discourage her from witchcraft by punishing her—he is scared that she will arm her future husband with magic. Jason, Medea’s husband, is terrified of her powers. Encouraged by his kingdom’s people, who “despise[] her,” he leaves Medea and takes a new wife.

Ostracized for their power, the powerful women of the novel are left to face the world alone. Hardened by the attacks they face, the women often isolate themselves further as a means of self-preservation. To prevent Minos from keeping her “in a jar [...] [to] breed to death,” Pasiphaë wields her poisons and magic with cruel abandon. Relying only on herself, Pasiphaë is loveless and alone. She rejects all forms of attachment, perhaps because she knows that love could be used against her. To her, “loath[ing] [...] is where [her] power comes from.” Medea, too, is a solitary figure. After Aeëtes’s attempts to curtail her powers, she runs away with Jason, whom she loves obsessively. But when Jason, intimidated by her power, leaves her, Medea kills his new wife before slaughtering her own children, “swearing that Jason [will] never have them.” Upon being abandoned, Medea, who “would rather set the world on fire than lose,” rejects the world completely. Circe, on the other hand, is physically isolated by the gods and is plagued by loneliness. Yet even when she meets others, she remains emotionally alone. When ships begin to stop at Aiaia, she learns quickly that the men on them see her only as a woman to dominate—she is raped by the captain of one of the first ships that comes. Traumatized and determined to protect herself, she turns all men who arrive on the island into pigs, further isolating herself. She does not even trust the men whom she creates a rapport with. She is wary of revealing anything about herself to Hermes and Odysseus, as she knows they will “gather [her] weaknesses up” to use them against her when they choose.

Of the three women, only Circe is able to find true love. “[Carrying] his wounds openly in his hands,” Telemachus treats Circe with dignity and respect, which she is not accustomed to. After years of being either feared or abused, Circe at last meets someone who treats her as an equal, and it is for this man—Telemachus—that she decides to give up her immortality. So, although misogynistic societies force powerful women to face the world alone, the book demonstrates that it is still possible for these women to find fulfillment through equality and respect from their peers.

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Women, Power, and Misogyny Quotes in Circe

Below you will find the important quotes in Circe related to the theme of Women, Power, and Misogyny.
Chapter 1 Quotes

“A girl,” my mother said to him, wrinkling her nose.

But my father did not mind his daughters, who were sweet-tempered and golden as the first press of olives. Men and gods paid dearly for the chance to breed from their blood, and my father’s treasury was said to rival that of the king of the gods himself […]

“She will make a fair match,” he said.

“How fair?” my mother wanted to know. This might be consolation, if I could be traded for something better.

Related Characters: Circe (speaker), Helios (speaker), Perse (speaker), Helios, Perse
Related Symbols: Gold
Page Number: 5
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 3 Quotes

I had heard by then the stories whispered among my cousins, of what [mortals] might do to nymphs they caught alone. The rapes and ravishments, the abuses. I found it hard to believe. They looked weak as mushroom gills. They kept their faces carefully down, away from all those divinities. Mortals had their own stories, after all, of what happened to those who mixed with gods. An ill-timed glance, a foot set in an impropitious spot, such things could bring down death and woe upon their families for a dozen generations.

It was like a great chain of fear, I thought. Zeus at the top and my father just behind. Then Zeus’ siblings and children, then my uncles, and on down through all the ranks of river-gods and brine-lords and Furies and Winds and Graces, until it came to the bottom where we sat, nymphs and mortals both, eying each other.

Related Characters: Circe (speaker), Helios, Pasiphaë, Minos, Zeus
Page Number: 31-32
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 5 Quotes

[Glaucos] pushed me from him. His face was caught, half in anger, half in a sort of fear. He looked almost like his old self […]

“No!” He slashed his hand through the air. “I will not think on those days. Every hour some new bruise upon me, some new ache, always weary, always burdened and weak. I sit at councils with your father now. I do not have to beg for every scrap. Nymphs clamor for me, and I may choose the best among them, which is Scylla.”

Related Characters: Circe (speaker), Glaucos (speaker), Helios, Scylla
Related Symbols: Scars
Page Number: 54
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 11 Quotes

[Pasiphaë’s] words were falling on my head like a great cataract. I could scarcely take them in. She hated our family? She had always seemed to me their distillation, a glittering monument to our blood’s vain cruelty. Yet it was true what she said: nymphs were allowed to work only through the power of others. They could expect none for themselves.

Related Characters: Circe (speaker), Pasiphaë, The Minotaur, Minos
Page Number: 147
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 13 Quotes

“I am no child to him. I was his to dispose of, like his seed-warriors or his fire-breathing bulls. Like my mother, whom he dispatched as soon as she bore him an heir. Perhaps it might have been different if I’d had no witchcraft. But by the time I was ten I could tame adders from their nests, I could kill lambs with a word and bring them back with another. He punished me for it. He said it made me unmarketable, but in truth, he did not want me taking his secrets to my husband.”

Related Characters: Medea (speaker), Circe, Aeëtes
Page Number: 170
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 15 Quotes

From time to time the wood buckled and a pig escaped. Most often, he would throw himself from the cliffs […] If it were a man, I wondered if I would pity him. But it was not a man.

When I passed back by the pen, his friends would stare at me with pleading faces. They moaned and squealed, and pressed their snouts to the earth. We are sorry, we are sorry.

Sorry you were caught, I said. Sorry that you thought I was weak, but you were wrong.

Related Characters: Circe (speaker)
Page Number: 195
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 16 Quotes

The scars themselves I offered to wipe away. [Odysseus] shook his head. “How would I know myself?”

I was secretly glad. They suited him. Enduring Odysseus, he was, and the name was stitched into his skin. Whoever saw him must salute and say: There is a man who has seen the world. There is a captain with stories to tell.

I might have told him, in those hours, stories of my own […] His face would be intent as he listened, his relentless mind examining, weighing and cataloguing […] He would gather my weaknesses up and set them with the rest of his collection, alongside Achilles’ and Ajax’s. He kept them on his person as other men keep their knives.

I looked down at my body […] and tried to imagine it written over with its history: my palm with its lightning streak, my hand missing its fingers, the thousand cuts from my witch-work, the gristled furrows of my father’s fire […] And those were only the things that had left marks.

There would be no salutes. What had Aeëtes called an ugly nymph? A stain upon the face of the world.

Related Characters: Circe (speaker), Odysseus (speaker), Aeëtes, Achilles
Related Symbols: Scars
Page Number: 215
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 19 Quotes

How would you know? I wanted to say. Often those men in most need hate most to be grateful, and will strike at you just to feel whole again.

Related Characters: Circe (speaker), Telegonus
Page Number: 263
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 25 Quotes

“Her name,” he said. “Scylla. It means the Render. Perhaps it was always her destiny to be a monster, and you were only the instrument.”

“Do you use the same excuse for the maids you hanged?”

It was as if I had struck him. “I make no excuse for that. I will wear that shame all my life. I cannot undo it, but I will spend my days wishing I could.”

“It is how you know you are different from your father,” I said.

“Yes.” His voice was sharp.

“It is the same for me,” I said. “Do not try to take my regret from me.”

He was quiet a long time. “You are wise,” he said.

“If it is so,” I said, “it is only because I have been fool enough for a hundred lifetimes […] I must tell you, all my past is like today, monsters and horrors no one wants to hear.”

He held my gaze. […]

“I want to hear,” he said.

Related Characters: Circe (speaker), Telemachus (speaker), Scylla, Odysseus, Trygon
Page Number: 373-374
Explanation and Analysis: