Monday, December 17, 2018

'How Does Medea’s Personality Shift During the Play ? Essay\r'

'In the play Medea, the fabulous Greek hero , Jason abandons his wife Medea and prepares to marry Princess Glauce of Corinth to capture a throne and the power and wealth of the kingdom. These events detonate various transformations in Medea’s character and frantic state; from suicidal despair at the counterbalance of the play, to apprehension and indecision when first faced with kill her children and finally to remorseless fury which leads her to undertake paranormal means to achieve her revenge.\r\nThe play immediately introduces us to Medea’s total despair after creation abandoned by Jason, giving the audience in the raw insight into how Medea’s intense emotional nuisance turns her against those who inflict it (Jason) and all of his emotional attachments (Glauce and his children.) Early in the play, Medea demands â€Å"What use is life to me?” ( ocellus 96), showing her sadness and weakness in the wake of her abandonment by Jason. With this li ne Euripedes implores the audience to sympathize with Medea who appears to be victimized by Jason’s callous behavior.\r\nMedea’s conflicting impulses approximately killing her children are revealed in her monologue in lines 1018-1080. In line 1057 she exposes her desire to spare her children facial expression â€Å"Let them alone, you miserable woman, spare your children”. However disdain her initial apprehension to the task, the monologue concludes with her definitive stop to murder her children, â€Å"I understand what evil I am about to do but my irritation is stronger even than my thoughts”(lines 1078-1079). For the rest of the play, she will no protracted question her decision. While it can be argued that her children’s deaths are fated from the beginning, this speech can be seen as definitive turning point in her thinking as a character, as she has force firm and resolute in her decision.\r\nFinally, her cruel and revengeful natures p revails and she declares to the audience her desire that â€Å"They [her children] must(prenominal) die and since they must I who brought them into the world, will kill them”. This declaration shows her sure thing that her illogical behaviour is both deserved and skillful under the circumstances. Medea’s vindictive nature causes her to function havoc on the Corinthian royal family as well as on her own family, curiously her two innocent sons. Her complete conviction in her own actions and lack of remorse is shown when she declares to Jason, â€Å"I contract wrenched your heart as I had to do.”\r\n'

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