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7/28/2019 Medea Monstrous and Evil
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Medea:
Evil and Monstrous
Gordon-Victor Fon
ENG 200 Spring 2012
May 7, 2012
One gets to wonder what message the playwright Euripides tried to convey to the
audience. The shift in sympathy from Medea, at the beginning of the play to Jason, towards the
end of the play questions Euripides intentions. Scholars and readers have debated and argued on
the more sympathetic character. Is it Medea or Jason?
On one hand, some scholars like Shirley Barlow, and Herbert Musurillo interpret Medea
to be an intelligent woman whose actions were based on the betrayal of her love for Jason.
Barlow agues that Medea is clever, articulate and above all self aware (160). Musurillo depicts
Medea as a woman who has been wronged and is fighting for justice for herself and her gender.
On the other hand, scholars like Denys Page, Seth Schein, Aristide Tessitore, and Staurt
Lawrence see Medea as intelligent, manipulative, and a barbaric witch. Page sees Medea to be
the first of a long line of bad women (x). Schein argues that Medeas exploitation ofphilia
to serve her own heroic ends is fruitless and self-destructive (67). Tessitore states that Medea
is perhaps the only woman is forever associated with the horrific act of both premeditated
murder of her children and the willingness to continue living in the full awareness of her
atrocities (593). Lawrence argues that Medeas actions to help Jason basically give more
instances of her ruthless criminality (50).
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Though Euripides tries to create some sympathy for Medea by suppressing her evil and
monstrous act half way through the play, his intentions were still very clear by the end of the
play. He brings out the monstrous aspects of Medea. In contrast to the scholars who see Medeas
actions as wise and heroic, it is evident that the flaws of Medea out weigh that of Jason and her
actions are irrational, barbaric, and momstrous. In this paper, I will bring out evidence that shows
that Jasons actions where due to love for his children and for the benefit of his family. I am also
going to show the actions of Medea which depicts her as irrational, barbaric, evil, and a monster.
From the words of the chorus, we understand that in the Greek society it was normal for a
man to marry another woman. Jasons action was wise and for the benefit of Medea and their
children. From the quarrel between Jason and Medea, we could tell that his marriage to the
kings daughter was not because of love but solely for the benefits he and his family would gain.
Jasons family was in Corinth on exile. Marriage to Kreons daughter was the best way to secure
their stay in the land and also to provide them with good financial standing. However, Medeas
anger and thirst for vengeance led to her banishment from Corinth. Jason still offers his
protection and money to Medea and the children in exile yet, Medea rejects his offers. It is very
clear that she was bent on carrying out her evil plans and nothing was going to stop her. She
complained about where she would go on exile but Jason was also willing to introduce her to
friends who would have treated her well. Jason, in this regard showed extensively that he cared
about the welfare of Medea and their children. He even accepted Medeas deceitful apologies
and was willing to do everything in his powers to free the children form exile.
Though most characters sympathize with Medea through out the first half of the play, we
still get a glimpse of her monstrous act echoed by the Nurse. Medea uses her magical powers to
persuade Pelias daughters to cut up their father and boil the pieces. Medea cries to the gods and
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the audience that she has no father, brother, nor country to turn to. The question one should ask
is: What happened to the ones she had? She brutally murdered her brother and deserted her
fathers land and her people. Medeas act of vengeance disturbingly is not manifested directly to
Jason. She rather goes about killing the innocent people. The murder of the kings daughter was
insane. Kreons daughter was not to blame for Medeas predicament. Jason willingly decided to
marry the kings daughter and was not forced to leave Medea. Medea also shows how monstrous
and evil she is by killing Kreon and his daughter by poison (an act of witchcraft) and after the
death of Kreaon and his daughter. Medea much more pleasure in getting details on how they died
in agony. This does not only depict her as a barbarian and monster but also a psychopath.
Contrary to some scholars interpretations of Medea, like Herbert Musurillo, who states
that Medeas cries are merely those of a woman wronged, deceived, and abandoned by a man
who has forsworn and betrayed his pledges made to Zeus and Themis. Musurillo also states that
Medea's first cry, was not that of a monstrous power and witchery but it was that longing to kill
herself (54). We should realize that her childrens death were already fated from the beginning
of the play. Though her first words were wishing her own death, the next utterances expressed
how much she hated her children I hate you, children of a hateful mother. I curse you and your
father (697). This is also in contrast to those who claim she struggles between her motherly
love for her children and her desire for vengeance. The nurse ominously foreshadows that I
am sure that Medea will not stop raging until she has struck someone, and the only real hope is
that she can target an enemy rather than a friend. Medea's initial curses against her children
would seem to challenge the honesty of her present sympathy for them. Her only loyalty is
to vengeance and her anger, which has sprung out of her love and needs to
vindicate itself through revenge. Abandoning her plan to punish Jason as severely as
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possible would be equivalent to denying the seriousness of her emotions and the
offense they have suffered. However, like Page argues, the murder of children caused
by jealousy and anger against their father is with no doubts brutality and barbaric
(xiv). Medeas contemplations about killing her children only helped in making us realize what
moves her more. Not the motherly love for her children but her blood thirsty soul for vengeance.
The murder of Jasons children as we can see did not evoke any type of repentance from
Jason. We rather see it clearer that Jasons early claims of acting wisely and working for the
profit of Medea and the children were factual. The sorrow he feels at the death of his children
opposes the fact that he was willing to let them exiled from Corinth. Above all their death also
proved that Jason was passionate and loved his children. On the other hand, the murders
committed by Medea were premeditated, efficiently planned, and perfectly executed. Even if one
gets to ignore the death of her brother and the death of Pelias probably due to the playwrights
manipulation of the play and its characters, one will find it hard to ignore the way she killed
Kreon, the princess, and her own children. Will the audience or characters at the end of such a
play sympathize with Jason who does everything he could to help Medea and the children or will
they sympathize with a woman (Medea) whos unreasonable anger and rage knows no bounds, a
murderer of many and an infanticide? Even the characters of the play who were deceived into
sympathizing with Medea could not withhold expressing their hatred for her after her monstrous
acts.
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Works Cited
Barlow, Shirley A. Stereotype and Reversal in Euripides' Medea Source: Greece & Rome,
Second Series, Vol. 36, No. 2 (Oct., 1989), pp. 158-171Published by: Cambridge
University Press on behalf of The Classical Association Stable
URL:http://www.jstor.org/stable/643169 .
Euripides. Medea. The Norton Anthology of World Literature. 2nd
ed. Ed. Maynard Mack and
Sarah Lawall. New York: NY. 695-725. Print.
Lawrence, Stuart Audience Uncertainty and Euripides' Medea Source: Hermes, 125. Bd., H. 1
(1997), pp. 49-55 Published by: Franz Steiner VerlagStable URL:
http://www.jstor.org/stable/4477177
Musurillo, Herbert Euripides' Medea: A Reconsideration Source: The American Journal of
Philology, Vol. 87, No. 1 (Jan., 1966), pp. 52-74Published by: The Johns Hopkins
University Press Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/292976
Page, Denys L. Medea. Contributors Publisher: Clarendon Press. Place of Publication:
Oxford, England. 1938. Pp. vii-xx url: http://www.questia.com/PM.qst?
a=o&d=100038424#
Schein, Seth L.(1990). Philia in Euripides' Medea. UC Berkeley: Department of Classics,
UCB. Pp. 57-72 Retrieved from: http://escholarship.org/uc/item/24j654sp
http://www.jstor.org/stable/4477177http://www.jstor.org/stable/292976http://www.questia.com/PM.qst?a=o&d=100038424http://www.questia.com/PM.qst?a=o&d=100038424http://escholarship.org/uc/item/24j654sphttp://www.jstor.org/stable/4477177http://www.jstor.org/stable/292976http://www.questia.com/PM.qst?a=o&d=100038424http://www.questia.com/PM.qst?a=o&d=100038424http://escholarship.org/uc/item/24j654sp7/28/2019 Medea Monstrous and Evil
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Tessitore, Aristide Euripides' "Medea" and the Problem of Spiritedness The Review of
Politics , Vol. 53, No. 4 (Autumn, 1991), pp. 587-601 Published by: Cambridge
University Press for the University of Notre Dame du lac on behalf of Review of Politics
Article Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/1407307
http://www.jstor.org.ezproxy.louislibraries.org/action/showPublisher?publisherCode=cuphttp://www.jstor.org.ezproxy.louislibraries.org/action/showPublisher?publisherCode=cuphttp://www.jstor.org.ezproxy.louislibraries.org/action/showPublisher?publisherCode=notredamepoliticshttp://www.jstor.org.ezproxy.louislibraries.org/action/showPublisher?publisherCode=cuphttp://www.jstor.org.ezproxy.louislibraries.org/action/showPublisher?publisherCode=cuphttp://www.jstor.org.ezproxy.louislibraries.org/action/showPublisher?publisherCode=notredamepolitics