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Euripide's Treatment Of Women In Medea

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Euripides’ Medea is different from most Greek plays due to the characterization of Medea, who offers a paradox between men and women, and more specifically, Medea and Greek women. The playwright himself opposes traditional Greek mythology through his progressive anti-war, pro women and anti religious ideas. The play is based in a male dominated society, allowing Jason and Creon to casually yet brutally throw Medea aside. Women, in Greek culture, lack authority amongst the men who believe they solely belong in the motherly role. What sets Medea apart is her intense passion behind her actions of revenge and, in her eyes, justice. The juxtaposition of a powerful woman in a male dominant society intimidates those around her:
Medea: “...What is your reason, Creon, for banishing me?”
Creon: “I am afraid of you-why should I dissemble it?- Afraid that you may injure my daughter mortally...you are a clever woman, versed in evil arts” (pg10) …show more content…

Her husband, Jason, cheated on her and wishes to banish her without retaliation; he expects her to be as weak as other women, but she is foreign to his home - foreshadowing a different, less peaceful outcome. Greek women were restricted to living within a patriarchal society in classical Greece, and are portrayed as fragile to reinforce the ‘ideal image’: a perfect wife, regarding a woman’s familial, social, cultural, and lawful role. Medea serves as a foil by offering the converse image - a violent, vengeful and strong

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