Consequences Of Denial In Medea

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The overall theme of this play is denial, more specifically the denial of past actions and the denial of present consequences as a result of past actions. Everyone in this play wishes something that happened in the past didn’t happen rather than taking responsibility for their actions and acknowledging what they did wrong, from Medea’s Nurse at the opening of the play wishing that Jason had never sailed to Colchis and met Medea, to the ending where Jason regrets ever marrying Medea rather than owning up to what he did and realizing that all of this tragedy was brought on by his actions. Medea herself is no stranger to acting without thinking of the consequences as prior to the events of the play Medea felt no qualms in abandoning her homeland in order to marry Jason or in causing the death of Pelias, however it can be argued that Medea felt the consequences of these actions later in her and Jason’s exile from Iolcus and in Jason’s eventual betrayal. …show more content…

However, even when his life has been ruined by Medea Jason still fails to see the fault in his actions as he blames her and his marrying of her for the tragedies that have befallen him rather than acknowledging that the only reason Medea killed anyone in the first place was because he was unfaithful to her and abandoned her for the prospect of power. And thus at the end we are brought back to the main theme of the play, denial, and as such I have come to believe that Euripides’ main goal with this play was to exhibit the different ways in which men and women react to consequences of actions and also as a way of exposing the injustices committed upon women by men in power and by men who seek

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