| If you are not familiar with the
conventions and settings for Greek tragedy, Tragedy:
The Basics or Introduction
to Greek Tragedy will help you get oriented. |
1. |
What background facts do we learn from the Nurse's opening
speech? (See E. Hamilton, Mythology, chapter 7.) |
2. |
What new trouble has the Tutor heard of? |
3. |
Why does the Nurse fear for Medea's children? |
4. |
Why does the Nurse say she prefers not to be great? |
5. |
Whom do the members of the Chorus represent? |
6. |
What excuse does Euripides use to bring Medea out in front of
her house? |
7. |
What role did women play in ancient Greek society? (See
especially ll. 229-56.) |
8. |
How is Medea's situation worse than it would be if she were a
native of the city? |
9. |
What promise does Medea ask for and receive from the Chorus? |
10. |
What new misfortune does Kreon bring to Medea? |
11. |
According to Medea, no sensible person would want clever
children. Why? |
12. |
Why is Kreon's love for his home and family especially bitter
to Medea? |
13. |
What one request of Medea's does Kreon grant? Is he really
being merciful? |
14. |
What does Medea resolve to do? |
15. |
Who was Medea's grandfather? (See l. 403.) |
16. |
According to the Chorus, which sex is cruel and deceitful
toward the other? Why have poets said otherwise? |
17. |
Whom does Jason blame for Medea's sorrow? |
18. |
What has Medea done for Jason? |
19. |
What justifications does Jason offer for his actions? |
20. |
How do Medea and the Chorus respond to Jason's defense? |
21. |
What does the Chorus say about what makes love desirable or
not desirable? |
22. |
Who swears to help Medea IF she comes safely to his land?
(Why would this part get special attention from the play's original audience?) |
23. |
What terrible plan does Medea reveal to the Chorus? Why will
she do it? |
24. |
Why does the Chorus praise Athens in ll. 808-21? |
25. |
Why does Medea speak of women as she does in ll. 865-69? |
26. |
What are Medea and the Chorus thinking of in ll. 870-82? Does
Jason understand? Why are his next words ironic? Why does Medea weep again? |
27. |
What struggle occurs in Medea in ll. 1035-1042? |
28. |
According to the Chorus, the childless are more fortunate
than those who have children. Why? |
29. |
How do Medea and the audience learn about the fate of Kreon
and his daughter? (Compare this with the way we learn of Jocasta's death and Oedipus's
blinding in Oedipus the King.) |
30. |
How is the death of Medea's children staged? |
31. |
Why is Jason's speech in ll. 1268-1280 ironic? |
32. |
What satisfaction does Medea find in her horrible deed? (See
l. 1337.) |
33. |
What final comfort does Medea refuse to allow Jason to have? |
34. |
How does the play end? Does this suggest that the gods
approve of Medea's actions? |
|
Now go the the Medea
Game ("A picture-based exploration of the tragedy") to
review. I think you'll enjoy the game and find it helpful. If your
answer is correct, the frame will advance to the next question. If
it is incorrect, you will be told why and sent back to try again.
Clicking on "Medea" at the bottom will take you to a useful
introduction to the play. |
| Some points to think about:
Euripides
produced this play about the fury of a mistreated foreign woman in 431 BCE, just as
Athens, at the height of its oppressive empire (Athenian "allies" were subject
states), began its fatal war with Sparta. What does the fate of Medea and of those who
mistreat and oppress her say to its own time? Might it shed any light on the problem of
terrorism in our own time? What happens to the characters of both when one human being
treats another as Jason treats Medea? What happens to Medea when she gets her terrible
revenge? Does this play inspire "pity [for unmerited suffering] and fear [for the
suffering of someone like ourselves]" as Aristotle says tragedy should do? Or does it
simply horrify us?
Last updated 08/09/05
E-mail comments to wallr@wssu.edu
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