"Jocasta vs medea" Essays and Research Papers

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    In ‘Medea’‚ Euripides shows Medea in a new light‚ as a scorned woman that the audience sympathises with to a certain extent‚ but also views as a monster due to her act of killing her own children. The protagonist of a tragedy‚ known as the Tragic Hero is supposed to have certain characteristics which cause the audience to sympathise with them and get emotionally involved with the plot. The two main characters‚ Medea and Jason‚ each have certain qualities of the Tragic Hero‚ but neither has them all

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    In The Medea by Euripides and The Aeneid by Virgil the characters of Medea and Dido respond to desertion by their husbands‚ the individual they love most‚ in the form of a quarrel. Both characters go on to attempt to alleviate their pain via revenge. Their judgments and actions are impaired by each woman’s great eros and amor. Euripides and Virgil illustrate their vision of passion and love through the effects of Medea and Dido’s actions under the influence of these emotions. Both women could choose

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    to audiences by capturing this distinct essence of passion in its characters. Medea‚ Beowulf‚ and The Once and Future King‚ are all works of literature that encompass characters who allow their human passions to stream out of control‚ causing the eventual ruin of one or more individuals. The ancient Greek play "Medea" is a most fitting example of uncontrolled passion and the dire effects that can result from it. Medea is a character that exemplifies a vast amount of passion throughout the text

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    The Medea by Euripides‚ Heroides XII: Medea to Jason by Ovid Both Fifth century B.C. playwright Euripides and Roman poet and dramatist Ovid tell the story of Jason ditching Medea for another woman; however‚ they do not always share a perspective on the female matron’s traits‚ behavior‚ and purpose. Euripides portrays a woman who reacts to injustice by beginning a crusade to avenge all who harmed her which she is prepared to see through even if it means resorting to the most contemptible methods

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    Character View of Medea + Evidence Page reference Nurse She pities her. In line 20 to 25 she expresses how Medea is hurt from Jason’s lies and how she wishes things would be different. The nurse says “My poor Medea” showing her sympathy to her. The nurse fears Medea in lines 43 to 50 on page 69 she expresses how she thinks that Medea may hurt someone in vain to the Tutor. She also says that Medea must be watched closely since she’s agitated and all over the place. 68-69 Tutor He

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    readers encounter in the play Medea by Euripides. After her husband‚ and famed hero Jason‚ leaves her to marry another woman‚ Medea responds by murdering their children. Yet‚ readers and even characters in the play are confused at to what Medea’s motives are behind this horrendous act. Many people believe that my murdering her children‚ Medea was saving them from future suffering and torture. Although one may want to believe that Medea murdered her son out of mercy‚ Medea killed her children as a form

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    Is Medea Justified In Her Actions? Is the killing of anyone ever justified? Is the life of one individual more important than another? In Euripides‚ MedeaMedea kills the princess of Corinth‚ the king of Corinth‚ Creon‚ as well as her own children. Are her actions the actions of an insane‚ distraught person or those of wise‚ foreign‚ barbaric woman trying to protect her children? Through the story of MedeaMedea justifies the killing of others while several other characters portray the injustice

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    Patrick Macfarlane 9/21/14 Medea Seminar Question 5 The “barbarian” woman Medea is similar to the Greek male Achilles in the Iliad. In Euripides MedeaMedea seeks revenge against Jason after Jason abandons her and their children. Jason abandons his own children in order to remarry with Glauce‚ the daughter of Creon‚ king of Corinth. (Svarlien‚ 14-25) In the Iliad‚ Achilles seeks revenge against Hector after Hector kills Patroclus. (Lombardo 21.105-110) Both Achilles and Medea are driven by anger and

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    Euripedes’ Medea is often regarding as one of the most groundbreaking and innovative Greek tragedies. Elements such as feminine power and familial betrayal shocked the audience when the play was performed‚ as Greeks were used to a common threads of male authority and innocence of children within their plays. Euripides chooses to craft his female protagonist as someone who defies gender roles‚ acts in a more masculine way‚ is a feared outsider‚ and shows integrity. This alone would have been considered

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    When the men of the two plays make derogatory marks in reference to both Antigone and Medea‚ it is shown that the males in Hellenic culture assured their place of dominance over others by belittling the people thought to be below them. In Sophocles’ play‚ Creon sentences Antigone to her death after performing an unlawful burial. His son‚ Haemon‚ reasons with his father to change his mind and free Antigone in order to avoid offending those citizens who side with her: Creon: Play not the spaniel‚ thou

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