Medea's True Love: The Role Of Love

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In Greek mythology the role of love can vary widely and love itself can manifest in many different ways. Ultimately, it is a powerful force that can have both positive and negative affects on the lover(s). In the quest of the Golden Fleece, a love connection forms between Jason and Medea, with the help of Cupid's arrow. While this love between the two characters is strong and last a very long time, its divine roots and obsessive nature kills the meaning of true love and makes it a tool Jason can take advantage of and a curse which slowly destroys Medea.
The love that was formed between Jason and Medea was not a sign of true love. True love can’t just be forced, but has to come through deep emotional feelings towards another. In his quest to find the Golden Fleece, Jason finally came to Colchis where he sees Medea. The two of them don’t really feel any sort of …show more content…

These actions helped Jason in the best way possible while slowly destroying her. While on the Argos, being chased by a large fleet, “Medea saved them again, this time by a terrible deed. She killed her brother,” (pg 132). She not only betrayed her family, but greatly wounded them as well. Her obsessive love over Jason completely separates her from her happy royal life in Colchis, destroying something she valued in the past.
After Jason finally completes his quest and becomes a famous hero, he begins to disregard Medea. He goes and finds another and forgets about all the things Medea had done for him. When she asks him why he no longer cares for her, he tells her that, “he had been saved not by her, but by Aphrodite, who had made her fall in love with him,” (pg. 134). Medea has sacrificed almost everything to help Jason and in the end, her love for him didn’t mean anything. It destroyed her completely and made her reach a point where had had to kill her children, Jason’s bride, and leave him

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