She betrays her homeland, gives up her status as a princess, kills her own brother, and helps murder Pelias and yet he eventually divorces her in order to get more prestige and provide trivial excuses such as it isn’t for my own interests, you’re better off here than your barbaric homeland, and credits his success, her sacrifices, to Aphrodite. His disrespect is a reflection of how the patriarchy thought of women. Creon, another representative of the patriarchy, was wise enough to exile Medea for her reproaches and in fear of the sorceress’s revenge, but she cunningly used the perception of women to make the king pity and underestimate her. This allowed her enough time to enact her revenge, symbolizing the downfall of the patriarchy as a result of their perception of
She betrays her homeland, gives up her status as a princess, kills her own brother, and helps murder Pelias and yet he eventually divorces her in order to get more prestige and provide trivial excuses such as it isn’t for my own interests, you’re better off here than your barbaric homeland, and credits his success, her sacrifices, to Aphrodite. His disrespect is a reflection of how the patriarchy thought of women. Creon, another representative of the patriarchy, was wise enough to exile Medea for her reproaches and in fear of the sorceress’s revenge, but she cunningly used the perception of women to make the king pity and underestimate her. This allowed her enough time to enact her revenge, symbolizing the downfall of the patriarchy as a result of their perception of