"Contrast medea and lysistrata" Essays and Research Papers

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    Medea by Euripides

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    has upset in your lifetime; now think would it be just for you to kill that person for it? Well‚ a sad tragedy written by the great Euripides titled Medea. In this sad tragedy‚ Medea the wife of Jason‚ find out that Jason has been having an affair with king Creons daughter and plans on marrying her and leaving Medea and her two children. Once Medea learn of this affair and betrayal and she wants to bring Jason her husband misery. So she kills the king’s daughter‚ as well as the king. As if those

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    Foreshadowing In Medea

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    happen next. 3) Give an example for the type(s) of irony used (dramatic‚ situational‚ and verbal). Situational irony was when Medea told Creon that she needed one more day and then she would leave because she didn’t have anywhere else to stay. [pic] 1) How does Euripedes portray women throughout the play?

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    Jason and Medea

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    The Chorus delivers these final lines of Euripides’s Medea‚ “…the end men look for cometh not‚ / And a path is there where no man thought; so hath it fallen here.” (Euripides‚ 80) This quotation not only signifies the events‚ which have transpired in the plot of Medea‚ it also shows the recognition of a very curious aspect of Medea: that the protagonist of the play‚ Medea‚ is not the tragic hero. A tragic hero by Aristotelian standards is one who possesses a driving aspect– or hamartia – which

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    Medea the Feminist

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    The role of women in Greek society is a major theme in Euripides’ Medea. In ancient Greek society‚ women are frail and submissive according to men‚ and their social status is considered very inferior. Feminism is the theory of men being treated differently than women and the male dominance over women in society. Because of Jason’s betrayal of Medea‚ she is a challenge to the traditional views of ancient Greek society based on her actions. She wonders about the differences between the treatment

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    Meditating on Medea

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    Meditating on Medea 1. Who is to blame for the tragedies that occur? This is a difficult question‚ because there is more than one character that can be blamed for the tragedies that occurred. First of all there is Jason who could be blamed‚ because he betrayed Medea by marrying the daughter of king Creon. Medea was hoping to spend a happy life with him and she betrayed her family by killing her own brother only to support Jason. Therefore he is somehow responsible for the anger that Medea feels.

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    Psychoanalysis of Medea

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    Title: Libido: Medea’s Real Force ABSTRACT In this study‚ Medea by “Euripides” is approached from a psychoanalytic perspective. It focuses on the theory of Freud that Libido plays an important role in the character building of an individual and that actions of individuals are motivated and controlled by it. The motivation of Medea’s actions does not come from the outside circumstances but arise from her libido. All her actions are analyzed to bring a somewhat clear picture of her psychology. She

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    Myth Of Medea

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    fire-breathing bulls that the god Ares had gifted Aeetes. Medea‚ a powerful sorceress‚ gave Jason an ointment to make him immune to fire and iron for a day. The second task was to sow the teeth the King gave Jason. But Medea knew that the teeth would grow into skeleton soldiers‚ so she instructed Jason to throw a stone into their midst‚ which would cause them to attack each other. The final task was to kill the dragon guarding the Fleece. Medea supplied Jason with a potion to make the Dragon fall into

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    the theme of restraint and agency in lysistrata Aristophanes’ Lysistrata is a play full of possibilities and contradictions. It is marked by the fact that the title of the play spells out the lead character of the play‚ a female. Furthermore‚ it portrays the women of Athens as teaming up with the women of Sparta to force their husbands to end the Peloponnesian War.  This was fantastical‚ of course in the Athens of 411 BC. The women didn’t have a vote. They had no say in the matters of the state

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    Medea and Democracy

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    ruler of our bodies. And this misfortune adds still more troubles to the grief we have. Then comes the crucial struggle: this husband we’ve selected‚ is he good or bad? For a divorce loses women all respect‚ yet we can’t refuse to take a husband." (Medea‚ 263-272). A woman could not function in society without the influence or permission of a man. How does a woman left in divorce survive? In this world‚ they don’t. Women must accomplish above and beyond their husband’s expectations in order to satisfy

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    described as a desire to change that situation. In the play Lysistrata‚ women have absolutely no political rights. There is a war going on and one woman wants to put and end to it. It is my opinion the character Lysistrata can be viewed as a modern day feminist. She takes charge in the self-titled play and claims that war shall be the concern of Women! It is too important a matter to be left to men‚ for women are it s real victims. Lysistrata wants to end the long war for it is taking a toll against

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