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Tuesday, January 15, 2019

Medea: power of women a mythological context

Medea is the sorceress born to King Aeetes of Colchis and is said to be the granddaughter of Helios the god of Sun. Ja pa manipulation seek the golden rams fleece belonging to Aeetes, in the border of earning the same as per conditions laid down by the King, Medea fell in love with Jason and assisted him in obtaining the fleece through with(predicate) her magical occasions on the conditions that he married her. On obtaining the fleece, Jason fled the Kingdom with Medea and Absyrtis, her younger brformer(a). To prevent Aeetes, from successfully pursuing them, Medea killed her younger brother and scattered his body in pieces so that her fathers work result had to perforce stop to collect the pieces and throw a decent burial to Absyrtis.The couple therefore settled in Corinth and Medea bore two sons to Jason. When Jason decided to marry the daughter of the king of Corinth, Creon, and Medea killed her as rise as her own children borne from Jason to spite him in the harshest possi ble way. subsequently the killing she took refuge with Aegeus, the king of Athens and bore him a son Medus, but finally failed in killing the elder son of Aegeus, thereby again having to flee from her husband. Medus later became the king of Media. The mythological tale of Medea provides a perspective of the procedure of women in Hellenic society and their pursuit to assault forward from a life addicted to serving the needs of men be it in the role of the daughter, sister, wife or mother.Viewing Greek Gender Role through the myth of MedeaMedeas splutter is that of a mythological woman in ancient times attempting to take for granted aver of her own life through a series of personal as well as public travails. The irony lies in it denoting, that to gain order in society a woman has to be a force of evil, a sorceress with super vivid powers granted as an exception or else than an emancipated position for all women folk. Medea thus embodies the opposite of the traditional s ex activity role for women in Greek society rejecting the status quo, the stereo eccentric of women being powerless and having to do the bidding of their manful relatives and ultimately rules make by society for them.The traditional role granted to Greek women in mythology is that of a, helper maiden (Clauss and Iles (Ed), 1997, 13). Some other views of gender roles indicate that women had a passive, domestic, emotional and somewhat irrational role to play while the male function was indicated as being agile, reasonable, and rational and representing the public face. Medea attempts to carve an fencesitter role not just for herself but for Greek women as a whole, however she is perhaps one of the few exceptions of her times and other women argon unable to support her personal conviction.In assuming an independent role for herself, Medea highlights to Jason that had he perhaps told her about his intent of second trade union, things would have been different, though Jason naturall y scoffs at this suggestion of hers as,Oh yes, if Id told you of the wedding,Im sure you would have lent me mulct support. Even now you cant stand to set aside that huge ire in your heart. (Johnston, Nd)Medea highlights her fierce independence by rejecting the second non consensual marriage of Jason and also his offer to provide for her if she can plainly request him for help. She tout ensemble refuses to plead him, despite his generous offer, as Jason states,All right, but I call the gods to witnessIm willing to help you and the children. and you reject my goods and cussedly push away your friends, and that the reason you suffer still more pain. (Johnston, Nd)Medea in relation to PeersMedeas attempt to review the role of women has been epitomized in the struggle against the stereo type, feminine role in Greek mythology. This role intent women to being a wife, a bearer of children and one who continues to be small both before and later on matrimony. Unlike other women, who per haps let their fate, Medea laments that,First, we need a husband, someone we get for an excessive price. He then becomes the ruler of our bodies. ___ For a divorce loses women all respect, yet we cant refuse to take a husband. __ But if the marriage doesnt work, then death is much to be preferred. ___ We women have to look at just one man. (Johnston, Nd)Medea detests the role of the feminine as a womb for the children of her husband however she assumed these thoughts only after she has been contemn by her husband who has taken another women. She represents a women scorned, thus,In other things a woman may be timorousin watching battles or seeing steel, but when shes hurt in love, her marriage violated, theres no heart more desperate for blood than hers. (Johnston, Nd)But then women in Greek society are not say to complain against such injustice. And her lament bore no fruit as in the classical Greek tradition, the women who rebels is expelled from society, thus Creon says,You t here, Medea, scowling in pettishness against your husband. Im ordering you out of Corinth. You must go into exile, and take those two children of yours with you. (Johnston, Nd)To Medea this is duple injustice as she has lost her husband to another woman and for protesting has been expelled from Corinth. Women in Corinth as the King told Medea had to suffer in silence. They had to be redeemed by bearing children for their husbands, through charity, sober behavior and faith. This very lucidly highlights the Greek view that women have no right to protest in slipperiness their husband has abandoned them and have to suffer in solitude. The key bailiwick is thus lack of choice to women while not for men.Medea however succeeds in gaining power through her role as a sorceress. Thus by her knowledge of herbs and health potions, she is able to gain control of her adversaries as well as her loved ones. These potions have power to heal, denoted as magic in mythology. This is one element of power which has been invariably granted to women in Greece, given their greater knowledge of the value and utility of different types of herbs.Another allusion to the power of women expressed by being a sorceress is Medeas killings, first her brother, than Jasons second wife and her own children. The power of causing death which is a negative influence is generally seen to be granted to the male in Greek mythology through his ability to wage war and victory. Medea aspires to and gains this power through her facility with potions, causing death with equanimity. This is the power of evil, so be it feels the scorned women, for perhaps in ancient Greece that is the only power that women could aspire for.By assuming an active role in each of her joint encounters with Jason, whether it is in assisting him in gaining hold of the golden rams fleece, acquire away from her father, seeking a second marriage or in getting her son Medus a say in the kingdom of Athens, it is the active role play ed by Medea, rather than normal passivity which is associated with women in Greece which is significant. Medea is so dominantly active, that she even gives an impression to Jason that in case he had sought her admit to marry a second time she would have perhaps accorded him the same.This active position is undertaken through the path of evil, as a sorceress. This was perhaps natural given the times in which Medea lived, representing exception rather than the aspirations of a pear-shaped proportion of her gender who were perhaps satisfied to remain within the hold of the traditional role granted to them by society of looking after the home and hearth. This route of evil to gain power as a woman may be faulted but perhaps it has to be located in the context of Medea as a woman having no other option in ancient Greece.Reference1. Johnston, Ian. (Translation). No Date (Nd). Euripides Medea. http//www.mala.bc.ca/johnstoi/euripides/medea.htm2.Clauss, jam J. Johnston, Sarah Iles. Eds. 1997. Medea Essays on Medea in Myth, Literature, Philosophy and Art. Princeton. Princeton University Press.3. Foley, Helene P. 2002. Female Acts in Greek Tragedy. Princeton. Princeton University Press.

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