subject predicate object context
47981 Creator 6618027fbb5f1af1ba94a32e4541639d
47981 Date 2016-12-27
47981 Is Part Of repository
47981 abstract Euripides’ Medea remains one of the most abidingly powerful of all Greek tragedies; its themes of love, jealousy, vengeance, and infanticide continue to enthral audiences more than two thousand years after it was first produced. Unlike many of Euripides’ plays, Medea is dominated by a single character, the eponymous heroine, and the debates which have surrounded the play often arise from the question of how we should respond to this complex protagonist. This chapter explores two central aspects of Medea's identity which might have affected the way an Athenian audience would have responded to her: her status as a foreigner, and as a woman. Finally it investigates her presentation in the play's final scene, and how the audience might have responded to this unsettling ending
47981 authorList authors
47981 editorList editors
47981 status peerReviewed
47981 uri http://data.open.ac.uk/oro/document/540586
47981 uri http://data.open.ac.uk/oro/document/540587
47981 type Article
47981 type BookSection
47981 label Swift, Laura (2016). Medea. In: McClure, Laura ed. A Companion to Euripides. Blackwell Companions to the Ancient World. Chichester: Wiley-Blackwell, pp. 80–91.
47981 label Swift, Laura (2016). Medea. In: McClure, Laura ed. A Companion to Euripides. Blackwell Companions to the Ancient World. Chichester: Wiley-Blackwell, pp. 80–91.
47981 Publisher ext-dfec3621c63b727aea32091d7bde7514
47981 Title Medea
47981 in dataset oro