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- Essay Name : 1083.txt
- Uploader : Luis A. Montoya
- Email Address :
- Language : English
- Subject : Mythology
- Title : Medea
- Grade : 12
- School System : Public School
- Country : USA
- Author Comments :
- Teacher Comments :
- Date :
- Site found at : Search Engine
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- A Friendly Enemy
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- "Death is my wish for myself, my enemies, my children" (Euripedes translated by
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- Robinson Jeffers, Medea 11). Medea is hungry for death. She wants to taste it on her lips and
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- wishes others to do the same. The value which Medea gives death is to use it as a weapon against
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- her enemies. On the other hand, the women and the nurse fear death. Death, to the women and
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- to the nurse is something that should not be wished for. "O shining sky, divine earth, Harken not
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- to the song that this woman sings" (13). One of the Greek women says this, for Medea is
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- screaming out that she would like to die. The women and the nurse hear Medea wishing for death
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- as if it were a treasure or something valuable.
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- The nurse and women are not in agreement with MedeaÆs view of death. To them, death
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- would be something that lurks around anything and anywhere waiting to strike. "He strikes from
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- the clear sky like a hawk, he hides behind green leaves, or he waits around the corner of a wall"
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- (12). To a Greek woman death is personified as a hunter or killer. She uses an animal, the hawk,
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- to compare to death. A hawk is a swift predator that attacks unnoticed, but to Medea death is
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- a trophy.
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- For Medea death has a value of importance. A friendship has been established. Death is
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- MedeaÆs friend. She uses it as a weapon to get what she views as justice. "Then if you have a dog
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- eyed enemy and needed absolute vengeance . . . Unchild him, ha? And then unlife him" (23).
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- Medea believed with great depth to get vengeance upon Jason. She wanted to go through with
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- her vengeance and hurt Jason as Jason hurt her. Jason left Medea for another woman thus leaving
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- her miserable and craving for revenge. Thus, she went on taking the life of his bride-to-be and the
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- life of their children. She also wanted to wash herself from the impurities of JasonÆs touch. "Ah,
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- rotten, rotten, rotten: death is the only water to wash this dirt" (12). This is a metaphor for she
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- compares death to a water, which is a symbol of pureness, to cleanse herself.
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- The nurse and women have almost pleaded to Medea not to even think about death, but
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- because of her resentment and hate towards Jason she is deaf to the womenÆs advice. The
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- importance given to death by Medea is rejected by the women. Death would only make things
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- worse in the womenÆs eyes. To Medea everything will be put in place and "justice" would be
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- served.
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- The feelings towards death among the women and Medea personified death. Death was
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- an enemy to the women, yet a "friend" to Medea. Death was valued as a weapon of revenge by
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- Medea and viewed as a weapon of destruction to the women. Life is more precious to the women
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- but Medea does not think of life as precious. She is being selfish only thinking about her friend
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- death to reach her goal; revenge.
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