While some people may believe that Medea crossed the line when she had killed four people, including her children, in order to get revenge, others view this killing as justifiable because it was the only way to truly hurt Jason. Yet, because of how emotional Medea was and where she came from, readers believe her to be demented and barbaric. However, readers will have to take into factor the actions that Medea took before this story took place and is told throughout the story in Medea’s own confession, “Love for you was greater than my wisdom. Then I killed Pelias in the most agonizing way, at the hands of his own daughters, and demolished his household, all of it. Now, after I’ve done all this to help you, you brute, you betray me and help …show more content…
yourself to some new wife. And we have children!” (Lines 570-578). Medea goes on to say that before this story happened, that she, in her stupidity went ahead and killed her brother Pelias, with the help of his own daughters. She later goes on to say that she tricked Pelias daughters into committing the crime, that she is now exiled from her home land. With background knowledge it was said that Medea was a princess. Another factor that could go on and help convince readers that Medea's actions are perfectly normal is what she says a couple of times throughout the story; Medea goes on and says, “A gift to me from my grandfather Helios, to protect me from all enemy hands.” (Lines 1321-22). Medea comes from the bloodline of a God, as part demigod. Medea will not only have their pride, but their anger. Helios is known for being a titan to the Sun and to oaths. He is also known for having anger problems, which being Medea’s grandfather is not very surprise. It seems that Medea not only got his anger and pride, but also a few gifts to help her in any emergency, which she also used for revenge. It seems fitting that Medea broke Jason in a way as Jason broke an Oath, which Helios is also known for. Last but not least is Jason. Jason believes that Medea should just suck it up and accept the fact that he is doing this for them and their children. Jason goes on to say, “Get this straight— this royal bride I have, I did not marry her because of any woman. As I told you, I wanted to save you and have children, royal princes, with the same blood as my sons. That way my house has more security” (704- 710.) As any guy who is trying to make his logic seen the best way and not take any blame, Jason, goes on and says he did not marry her because she is not just any women, rather he did it so he can SAVE Medea and his children so they all can have a better life.
Even at the end, Jason still does not take blame but rather mock Medea and call her stupid, selfish, unreasonable, and emotional, as she just can't seem to view things his way. Marianne Hopman explains why Medea decided to kill as her plan of revenge. Hopman states that when Medea was talking to Jason before , she put his heroic deeds in jeopardy as it was Medea who did all the heroic stuff and Jason was just there. Hopman says that the reason why Medea killed off the princess was mostly because Medea wanted to save her from the same faith Medea had as she was also a lovestruck princess who fell in love and got married. Another factor that Hopman uses is that her children were the only thing standing in the way of Medea moving on, they were like rocks sinking in her in waters reminding Medea of the life she had with Jason. So it was expected of Medea to kill them as they were the last thing Medea had with Jason since the marriage was over with. The dead family symbolizes the broken and now dead marriage and household that Jason and Medea
have. Medea now at a new fresh start goes on and leaves a few words, emotionally and physically done with Jason as she goes on and leaves to bury her children and go on and live a new life with a new lover. While Medea was a bit emotional, she is rather clever as she quickly made plans after faith decided to give her new problems, even if it was for revenge, she knows she is not a hero, but a victim that refuses to stay a victim and suffer any longer. It’s rather Jason and his reasoning that pushed Medea, to cross over the thin line separating love and hate as because of how she grew up and what she did in the story, should have readers understand that Medea is not demented; she is rather provoked into doing something she deemed necessary in order to get revenge.
“The Onion’s” mock press release on the MagnaSoles satirical article effectively attacks the rhetorical devices, ethos and logos, used by companies to demonstrate how far advertisers will go to convince people to buy their products. It does this by using manipulative, “scientific-sounding" terminology, comparisons, fabrication, and hyperboles.
The Onion’s mock press release markets a product called MagnaSoles. By formulating a mock advertisement a situation is created where The Onion can criticize modern day advertising. Furthermore, they can go as far as to highlight the lucrative statements that are made by advertisements that seduce consumers to believe in the “science” behind their product and make a purchase. The Onion uses a satirical and humorous tone compiled with made up scientific diction to highlight the manner in which consumers believe anything that is told to them and how powerful companies have become through their words whether true or false.
According to the article, “Jason Iason,” Medea and Jason got married after he gave the Fleece to Pelias. Jason didn’t become king, though, because of something Medea did. Some believe Jason helped her plot the death of his uncle, but others say it was all Medea’s idea. She convinced Pelias’s daughters that they could make him look young again. All they had to do was chop him up and put him in a pot, and that’s what they did. The people of Iolcus were disgusted. Jason and Medea were forced to flee (“Jason”). They lived happily for a while, having many children. Their delightful life ended, though, when out of nowhere, a king offered his daughter to Jason. He accepted the marriage proposal, leaving Medea and their children. Some think that Jason was cheating on Medea before he told her about his new lady friend, though (“Jason Iason”). Medea was so infuriated, that she sent the princess a poisoned wedding dress. The dress ended up killing the princess and the king. Medea wasn’t done yet. To get even more revenge on Jason, the Encyclopedia of Myths says that Medea murdered all their children. Other stories say that the citizens were so upset about their king and princesses deaths, that they killed Jason and Medea’s children. Either way, their kids end up being murdered. When his children and fiance died, and his wife left him, Jason grew very lonely and depressed. Thus leading him to pray to the
While both women do wrong by the law of man, and Medea against the law of the gods, they do it for different reasons. In the beginning Medea kills many people and monsters with little or no concern of the consequence. When the story deals with modern times Medea kills out of pure revenge and spite for Jason. She plots for weeks to kill Jason’s new bride and poisons her, and then before she leaves the country she murders her two sons, she had with Jason, before she rides off in her bright white chariot.
Medea is outraged that she sacrificed so much to help Jason, only to have him revoke his pledge to her for his own selfish gain. She asks him whether he thinks the gods whose names he swore by have ceased to rule, thereby allowing him to break his promise to her. Medea vows to avenge her suffering by destroying Jason's new family and his children. When Jason curses his wife for her murdering at the end of the play, she says to him, 'What heavenly power lends an ear / To a breaker of oaths, a deceiver?
As with Medea and Jason, the battle between the two lead to former's madness, leading to the death of the enemies she considered, and, unfortunately, leading as well to the death of her own children. Medea felt betrayed and left behind by her husband Jason, as well as continuously aggravated by Creon despite the fact that it was she who was in a disadvantaged position.
In Medea, a woman betrays her homeland because of her love for a man. Jason is the husband that she ferociously loves and makes sacrifices for. They have two children together: Antigone and Ismeme. In Jason's quest for the golden fleece, Medea assists him in multiple ways. One of the things she does to help their cause is bring about the death of her own brother. Certainly this is a woman who would sacrifice anything for her husband. Weigel records the fierceness of Medea's passion in his critique: "As a woman of passion, Medea is wholly committed to Jason as the object of her emotional life, whether in love or hate. When she loved Jason she did not hesitate to kill her brothe...
Aegeus, the next person to be manipulated by Medea, is done by having him feel pity for her. She uses her skilled craftiness to manipulate and bargain with Aegeus. Medea had her sights set on Jason and the only way she can get into his head, was by being submissive and toying with his pride. “Beseech your father’s bride, whom I obey,” (56); she manipulates Jason to allow their children to give the new mother the robe made out of poison to her as a special gift. Her final victims of manipulation are her innocent children. Medea had focused on her next targets and used her manipulation on her children for a greater outcome. She manipulates herself into thinking that it is the only way she can inflict much damage to Jason. To her, killing her children was the only way she can get in her husband’s head and will give her the positive end to all the
When Jason left Medea to marry Glauce, Medea was plagued with sadness and then with anger. The man she loved, the man that she gave up her life for, had betrayed her. In the patriarchal society that Medea lived in, it was not acceptable for a woman to protest any decision made by her husband. Medea went against all social standards and took revenge on Jason for the wrongs that he had committed. She was willing to take any chance and sacrifice even her most valued possessions. Medea knew that the best way to avenge the wrongs of Jason was to kill Glauce and the children. It was a huge sacrifice for Medea to kill the children that she loved, but she allowed herself to look past that love and only see her hate and contempt for Jason. Medea was willing to go against every rule that society set, so that her husband wouldn't get away with leaving her for political reasons.
In Medea, a play by Euripides, Jason possesses many traits that lead to his downfall. After Medea assists Jason in his quest to get the Golden Fleece, killing her brother and disgracing her father and her native land in the process, Jason finds a new bride despite swearing an oath of fidelity to Medea. Medea is devastated when she finds out that Jason left her for another woman after two children and now wants to banish her. Medea plots revenge on Jason after he gives her one day to leave. Medea later acts peculiarly as a subservient woman to Jason who is oblivious to the evil that will be unleashed and lets the children remain in Corinth. The children later deliver a poisoned gown to Jason’s new bride that also kills the King of Corinth. Medea then kills the children. Later, she refuses to let Jason bury the bodies or say goodbye to the dead children he now loves so dearly. Jason is cursed with many catastrophic flaws that lead to his downfall and that of others around him.
The problem set at the beginning of the play is that Jason has decided to marry another wife, Glauce. Medea is angered and will not let Jason off without punishment. The loss of Jason is not only a matter of passion; Medea has been completely humiliated by Jason's decision to take a new bride. Her pride shows again when she refuses Jason's aid. Though her situation is difficult, she would rather destroy all than accept help from one who has wronged her so horribly. Living as a barbarian among Greeks has made her more defensive, more full of hurt pride. To punish Jason, Medea had her children deliver poisoned gifts to the new bride, to kill her children, Glauce, and Creon. . Medea is not without feeling, nor is she a sociopath. She comprehends the difference between right and wrong, but chooses to follow the dictates of rage.
Medea’s illegitimate marriage and the betrayal of Jason drive Medea to extreme revenge. Medea chooses to act with her immortal self and commit inhumane acts of murder rather than rationalize the outcomes of her actions. Medea see’s this option as her only resort as she has been banished and has nowhere to go, “stripped of her place”. To create sympathy for Medea, Euripides plays down Medea’s supernatural powers until the end of the play. Throughout the play Medea represents all characteristics found in individual women put together, including; love, passion, betrayal and revenge. Medea’s portrayal of human flaws creates empathetic emotions from the audience. The audience commiserates with Medea’s human flaws as they recognize them in themselves. Medea plays the major role in this play as she demonstrates many behavioral and psychological patterns unlike any of the other Greek women in the play; this draws the audience’s attention to Medea for sympathy and respect.
Later in the story, our sympathy transfers from Medea to Jason. Her revenge turns immoral, leaving readers with a sense of uneasiness. It is not so much the fact that she kills Creon and his daughter, but the fact that she slays her children in cold-blood.
Because Medea was such a different woman people in her society were afraid of her, including men. As a result of this, before Jason, she never experienced being in love. When she finally experienced this type of love she went to no end for Jason. To protect Jason and her love for him she killed the beast guarding the Golden Fleece, she killed her brother, and she left her home, family and everything she knew for him. Most women would not have gone that far for love, especially women during her time; but Medea was not your average woman. All of the things she did for Jason will come into play, and partly account for her actions at the end of the play.
In The Medea, Medea gives up her home, murdered her brother and tossed the pieces of his corpse and betrays her family to escape with her lover Jason. Against her father's wishes she helps Jason recover the Golden Fleece. Afterwards, Medea and Jason fall in love, get married and Medea gives birth and raises two sons. Unfortunately, Jason abandons Medea and marries King Creon's beautiful daughter. Medea alternates her role from a lover and partner in crime to an obsessive prideful monster. Me...