The Role of Minor Characters in Medea

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The Greek playwright, Euripides, is considered one of the three great tragedians of classical Athens. His play, Medea, is one of his most popular and well-known plays. It tells the story of Medea, the princess of Colchis and a descendant of the Gods, and her revenge on Jason after his betrayal. Euripides retells her story and portrays her through the accurate but limited perspectives of the two supporting characters: the Nurse, who is a slave in Jason’s house, and the Chorus, who are a group of Corinthian women. The limitations in their viewpoints stem from the social gap between them and Medea, which is less prominent for the Chorus as they hold a higher social position in comparison to the Nurse. Due to their differences on the social ladder, the Chorus and the Nurse mainly focus on Medea as a wife and a woman. Medea sharply contradicts their views and refuses to follow their collective norm of obedience. Euripides utilizes her self-representation and the two supporting characters’ opinions to form a well-rounded insight into Medea’s personality.
At the beginning of the play, Euripides provides the Nurse the significant function of introducing Medea. She presents Medea as Jason’s victim when she says: “Medea lies collapsed in agony,/Dissolving the long hours in tears” (p. 18). Euripides justifies her narrow focus by placing a crucial and a prominent social gap between her and Medea. The Nurse’s blind loyalty to Jason and his house results from this social difference. For example, as she was on the verge of cursing Jason, she interrupts herself by saying: “My curse on- No! No curse; he is my master” (p. 19). The Nurse is a slave in Jason’s house; therefore her fidelity prevents her from cursing him despite his guilt. She is mere...

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... ignores her domestic side and her internal suffering expressed by the Chorus and the Nurse, and instead she focuses on executing her revenge to heal her wounded pride. Hence, Medea’s focus on her dominance compensates for the two supporting characters’ favoritism to her motherly side.
Euripides portrays Medea through the Chorus and the Nurse in a partial, but accurate method, which focuses on Medea’s façade as a wife and a mother. Their limited perspectives are attributed to the social breach between them and Medea that results in their loyalty to Jason. Medea’s interpretation and the Nurse and the Chorus’s views are limited on their own, but when the two opposite interpretations meet, they provide the audience with a much deeper understanding of Medea’s personality. Thus, Euripides skillfully presents her as the victim, but at the same time as a prevailing queen.

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