The Representation of Femininity in Euripides? Medea

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The Representation of Femininity in Euripides' Medea

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At the time Euripides wrote Medea, Ancient Greece was a patriarchal

society: women had little or no rights, and were treated as the weaker

sex. Women were expected to stay at home and bear and care for their

children, while men went to work ?wives to produce true-born children

and to be trustworthy guardians of the household? (Resource Book 3,

D5b ? Demosthenes 59.122). Men made the rules, while women were

expected to be passive and weak, and were thought to be ?silly

creatures? with no mind of their own. This is illustrated in Lysias?

speech written for a man whose wife had committed adultery, where the

man blames the ?defendant? for seducing his wife. He say?s his wife

?was seen by the defendant and eventually seduced? and that he

?brought about her downfall? (Resource Book 3, D3 ? Lysias 1.6-10), as

though his wife was totally under the control of the defendant.

Although it was acceptable for men to have relations outside marriage,

women were expected to remain faithful, and to accept their ...

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