Hi there! I was wondering if anyone could take a look at my Medea text response and give some feedback? I really need to improve so even a mark considering end-of-year exam marking would be really helpful!! THANKYOU
The audience would expect Medea to be a witch; does Euripides fulfil those expectations, or does he present a more ‘normal’ woman?
Set within the patriarchal zeitgeist of Ancient Athens, Euripides’ Medea explores and even challenges the set roles and perceptions of women of the time. Through Medea, the audience is confronted with a woman seemingly maleficent and witch-like. While Euripides constructs Medea as a vengeful and threatening woman, he ultimately portrays her to be a representation of the common woman in Ancient Athens. It is her decision to seek justice for herself and not her portrayal, that deviates her depiction from that of the typical Ancient Athenian woman.
Euripides presents Medea as having a revengeful and callous disposition. The first exposure the audience has to Medea herself is her cry that she “wants [her children] to die along with [their] father,” discomforting the audience with her upfront violent tendencies. Not only were woman not present in the male public space in Ancient Greece, but it would have been highly unusual for the audience to hear woman screeching in a public domain. Further discomforting the audience, this line is presented in an eerie high pitch male voice. This level of unease in the audience suggests that Euripides intentionally establishes Medea as violent and vengeful in the seminal scene of the play. This allows Euripides to instantly position his audience to perceive Medea as having a threatening nature, which he maintains through the course of the play. This depiction of Medea is compounded by her reaction to Glauce and King Creon’s death; that it would “make [her] twice as happy if they died in agony.” Coupled with the gruesome and detailed imagery of the murders, Euripides presents Medea to have a sadistic nature, which collides with the expectation the audience have for woman of the time: to be nurturing and refrain from violence and revenge. This expectation of all woman being nurturing and also motherly is also absent from the construction of Medea in that she claims that killing her children is a “necessary deed.” This callous act of filicide ultimately having no repercussions for Medea and Euripides’ positioning of her to be above the audience and human level, laughing in her chariot drawn by dragons, tacitly determines her to be villainous. Euripides presents to the audience a dimension of Medea being callous and violent, which they are unaccustomed to witnessing in women hence, complying with their expectation of her being witch-like.
However, Euripides portrays Medea as a typical wife in Ancient Greece and her suffering as an unjust norm of the time. The first mention of Medea in the play is the nurse, a common woman, lamenting that Medea “seeks to please her husband in all she does.” In the years that they have been married, Medea has always been obedient to Jason and supported him hence, for him to marry another woman is a deep betrayal. This creates a sympathy for Medea from the audience as she has fulfilled the duties that a woman of the time would have been expected to carry out, including giving Jason two sons. This is highly valued by the Ancient Athenian society who take pride in having sons to continue their legacy and house to carry their reputation on. Euripides’ portrayal of Medea being the ideal wife and her own perception of herself of being a “cruel husbands plaything,” further elicits sympathy from the audience for her and works to dilute the violent and callous depictions of her through the play. Euripides also presents Medea as the typical Ancient Athenian wife through the Tutors response to Medea’s adversity, asking if Jason “is so different from the rest of mankind.” The Tutor’s allusion to the notion that Medea should be somewhat desensitised to her husband’s infidelity, highlights that in Ancient Athens, male infidelity was a common occurrence that is essentially defined ‘mankind.’ Hence, Medea is just like the many other women of the time who would have been betrayed by their husbands, despite being the ideal wife of the time and “keeping the marriage intact.” Euripides suggests that Medea has the same experiences as many women of the time, making her an accurate representation of women at the time, and thus, a ‘normal’ woman.
For Euripides therefore, it is Medea’s decision to seek justice for herself and not her portrayal, that depicts her as not the typical woman. Without a man, Medea is “driven without rights into exile.” This is due to the fact, that in that time period, a woman without a husband or family had no value in society and hence, no access to legal or societal recourse in times of adversity. Not only was Medea denied access to justice due to being a woman, she was also an outsider in Ancient Athenian society where citizenship was highly valued. Creon also had no obligation or responsibility to listen to Medea’s pleas as “laws [were] prescribed for men.” It is due to the plight of women and outsiders of the time, that the only way Medea could obtain justice was to devise a ruthless plan herself. Euripides utilises the imagery “uphill flow the water of sacred rivers” to suggests a drastic change in the ways of nature. He suggests that women, being “cowards when it comes to fighting,” were not expected to fight for themselves as they were not considered to have strength or courage to fight in their nature. As a result, Medea deciding to take action against Jason is where her character diverts from that of a typical woman of Ancient Greece.
Euripides presents to his audience the character of Medea as the ideal wife in Ancient Athens, betrayed by her husband, with a callous and passionate disposition. However, it is her decision to seek revenge that truly digresses from the audience of the time’s expectation of her. Euripides presents her revenge as having no repercussions for her and even as being rewarded from the Gods, suggesting that women of the time were capable of being vengeful and could strike back when wronged.