Reflective Statement #3 In “Medea” by Euripides‚ Medea end up committing filicide. At the end of the play she kills both of her children. She claims that she does it to prevent their humiliation and her being embarrassed by her peers. I’ve learned that in most cases the mother is the one who commits filicide. That makes sense to me that it is more likely for Medea to kill the kids than Jason. I learned that in most cases of filicide the child is under six years old. In the play Medea specifically mentions
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revenge takes in both Medea and The Thousand and One Nights is detrimental to a numerous of characters and results in the loss of many lives. The need to avenge someone for their wrong doings against you indicates that this was a common form in seeking justice during these ancient times‚ but through these two literary works it is apparent that gender plays a crucial role in how one goes about seeking revenge on their targeted subjects. In Medea the lead character Medea is a very clever and crafty
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Creon and Medea The “barbarian” princess and witch Medea met the Argonaut hero Jason while he was in Colchis on his quest for the Golden Fleece. She fell in love with Jason and used her magical knowledge to aid him in the seemingly impossible tasks set by her father King Aeetes as the price for obtaining the Golden Fleece. She fled Colchis with Jason back to his home at Iolcus in Thessaly‚ but they were soon forced to flee once more to Corinth‚ where they lived in relative peace for some
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TEACHING EURIPIDES’ MEDEA K.O. Chong-Gossard Euripides’ Medea remains one of the most often performed Greek tragedies today‚ and one of the favourite tragedies for secondary school students to read in Classics or English courses. Since there is a tremendous amount of scholarship already published on this play of plays‚ this article is intended to provide a quick reminder of the background to the play‚ a discussion of the character of the chorus and the character of Medea‚ and thus a variety
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’ Continuing in this vein of abstract dissertation‚ Medea laments the contemptible state of women: they are forced to become their husbands’ possessions in marriage (with no security‚ for they can be easily discarded in divorce)‚ they must endure the pains of childbirth‚ and they are kept from participating in any sort of public life (unlike men‚ who can engage in business‚ sport‚ and war). Once their home is taken from them‚ women like Medea are left with nothing. the lack of emotional restraint
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2011 Medea Video Project Analysis The “Medean” Hillbillies Euripides’ Medea is classified an ancient Greek tragedy. However‚ this story is much more than a tragedy. The story of Medea is one that definitely grabs the reader’s attention through both its text and its themes. The themes that the story of Medea presents are very practical and still continue to exist in humanity today. The three largest and most obvious themes that a reader is most likely to find and relate to while reading Medea are
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Medea Response Paper Alex Barba 3/26/13 The character Medea can easily be seen as the villain of her own play having brutally murdered her own children as well as King Creon and his daughter. It is difficult to understand why someone would go to such lengths of revenge for someone divorcing them but Medea is a complex character whose unyielding motivation is what drives the play. It is also tempting to dismiss her actions as crazy‚ however using the word crazy implies that there are no
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events of The Medea unravel in‚ is a society that regards the atypical as threatening and gives hardly any rights to women and foreigners – a common characteristic of Athenian societies during the play’s publication. Since Medea is part of the two groups in Athenian society that are treated discriminatorily and her cleverness is seen as menacing‚ the rulers of Corinth want to exile her almost immediately upon Jason’s betrothal to the princess of Corinth. Because of her alienation‚ Medea feels like she
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Medea‚ a mother‚ a wife‚ an ex princess‚ that gave up everything for the one she loved. The one that took everything from the one she loved due to the pain he caused her. Medea is one that was like no other in Corinth she feels no remorse. Media is not a Greek and in order to be with Jason‚ the one she loves‚ she had to give up her title of a princess. Jason then turns on her to marry the princess of Corinth in order to give their two kids a name and a place in Corinth‚ instead of being an outsider
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history‚ many honor codes have based their sense of justice on the principle of an eye for an eye. However‚ while justice seeks to better society‚ revenge is solely designed to harm. In the play Medea‚ the author Euripides illustrates the perils of using revenge as a means to right wrongdoings. After Medea suffers the injustice of her husband’s betrayal‚ she feels justified in taking every measure she can to avenge herself. However‚ her support from the chorus disappears after she kills her own children
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