World literature Antigone vs. Medea Whether it be Medea who kills her sons‚ Antigone who buries her brother‚ both female characters hold a common goal of seeking either revenge or avenge as well as rebel against authority in the name of her beliefs. However‚ the female roles in both plays are associated with death. Furthermore‚ their twisted family history also seem to contribute to the result of each tragedy. Both main characters are characterized as bold‚ stubborn‚ outspoken
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The Roles of Dido and Medea; A Comparison of Cultures Women in the ancient world did not have the rights or status as we do today. They were looked upon as possessions or property. For a woman to be strong or be allowed to hold a position of power was something that was unheard of. Medea and Dido were two very strong and powerful women‚ however each lived in slightly different cultures. Their choices in how they chose to wield their power gives us a small insight on the differences in
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In the play‚ Medea‚ translated by Robinson Jeffers‚ Medea is presented with many choices. These choices have big impacts on her and her peers’ lives. When reading‚ it felt like a children’s scary story where you were able to chose your own fate. Medea had many opportunities to chose her own outcome. Through her choices‚ she created great pain and a great story. First‚ the all-female chorus held many representations in the play. When they sang and said what they felt‚ no actions were taken to help
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The role and Significance of Hubris in the fall of Jason As is archetypal to all Greek tragedies‚ ‘Medea’ by Euripides chronicles the downfall of a noble hero‚ Jason‚ as a result of a combination of factors like fate‚ hubris and the will of the gods. In ‘Medea’‚ the hubris of the main character‚ Jason‚ was his pride. This drove him to betray his wife Medea’s trust and defy moral parameters set by the gods. Euripides employed the hubris of Jason and his act of disobedience towards the gods as a reflection
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Love hate In the play"Much Ado about Nothing"‚written by Shakespeare‚the audience reads a lot of deceptions going on throughout the development of the story. Many of the characters will deceive one another.As we read the story we find out deception is a bad way of solving a problem that leads to misleading of others. In the play their are two couples. In the beginning of the play Shakespeare introduces us to the couple Claudio and Hero. They fall in love at first sight. Although‚ not all
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The Chorus influences our response to Medea and her actions in both a positive and negative manner. The Chorus‚ a body of approximately fifteen Corinthian women who associate the audience with the actors‚ is able to persuade and govern us indirectly through sympathy for what has been done to Medea‚ a princess of Colchis and the victim of her husband’s betrayal of love for another woman. The Chorus also lead us to through sympathy for Medea to accept her decision of taking revenge on princess Glauce
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Medea The Sanctity of Oaths Through the play Medea‚ Euripides shows us the importance of keeping a promise given. At the beginning of the story‚ we see the play’s two opposing views of promise keeping represented by the Nurse and the Tutor. As she stands outside of Medea’s house and laments the way Jason has slighted Medea by taking another wife‚ the Nurse speaks of the “eternal promise” Jason and Medea made to each other on their wedding day (17-21). The Nurse wishes
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Euripides wrote Medea as a sort of promotion for his ideas. In it‚ he emphasized the gods‚ which he believed the people of Greece were ignoring. He also made sure to highlight the issues with the treatment of women. To do this‚ he took a commonly despised character‚ Medea‚ and warped the initial story of Jason and the Golden Fleece to show it from a female perspective. By making Medea the focus of the story‚ Euripides was able to explore the problems Greek women of the time faced. Though classic
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a woman’s fed up‚ there’s nothing you can do about. It’s like running out of love. No matter what you say‚ it’s too late to talk about it.” Those song lyrics acutely describes Medea’s rage. There was no crime great enough to repay Jason for the hurt and pain he put her through. The character Medea depicts how irrational and extreme a woman can be when she pushed off the edge. Act two opens with what seems to be Medea contemplating: “How did Jason find the power to do it? First he took my father
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Medea is the daughter of King Aeetes of Colchis and the granddaughter of the sun-god‚ Helios. Medea falls in love with Jason‚ the leader of the Argonauts‚ when he first arrived in Colchis to obtain the golden fleece from her father in order to claim the crown from his uncle‚ King Pelias of Iolcus. King Aeetes refuses to give up the golden fleece and will only do so if Jason can complete three impossible tasks that no human could finish without magic. Knowing that these tasks were impossible for
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