Medea - Male And Female Perceptions Of The World

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Medea - Male And Female Perceptions Of The World Ask yourself this, Is this world biased against a particular gender? Do we mainly focus on women's issues or men's?' What would your answer be? I bet most of you would say no, we aren't biased at all. And, in many cases, that would be correct. But look at some of the other parts of the world where women aren?t allowed a say, they aren?t allowed to put their point of view forward even in our own society. They aren?t allowed to know information until the male passes it on to them. This ?gap? between women and men is widest in these areas. This type of treatment was happening at the times of the great ancient Greek playwrights such as Aeschylus, Sophocles, and the controversial Euripides. Euripides' play 'Medea' explores these themes as well as many others. Unlike today where women are usually regarded as important as men are, the ancient Greek men were ranked much higher than women in the hierarchy and therefore there was quite a gap between them. This meant that men were able to order women around and information was available to them before anybody else. Men were regarded as smarter than women so they were chosen to do special tasks while the women were left to be servants. But men didn?t seem to understand women much at all. Some men believed that they were just ?Poor women?, ?Harping on trouble?, where really they were doing things that would have helped themselves as well as the people around them. Medea is expecte...

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