Sunday, December 16, 2012

Euripides' Medea: The play and the character: Part 1

33 tragedies survive from ancient Greece. 7 of these are the work of Aeschylus, 7 Sophocles and 19 Euripides. Of the 19 Euripides tragedies that have survived completely (well, almost), my favorite is 'Medea'.

Perhaps I like this play the best of all Euripides' work because I like the character of Medea the best of all the characters that Euripides employs. I liked her character a whole lot in classical myth before I even read the play. She is, in my opinion, one of the most dynamic, complex and multifaceted characters in classical myth and that's saying a lot. Unpredictable as the ocean, fickle as the winds, with the power of the sun and the beauty of the earth: the elements that combine to make Medea do so generously.

Euripides

In myth, Medea is the granddaughter of Helios, the god of the sun. She was a witch, which in ancient Greece meant that she had supernatural powers that allowed her to control things that humans generally could not. On a list of the most powerful/dangerous witches of classical myth, Medea would be second only to Circe, who I might discuss in a later post (she is almost as fascinating as Medea). Key to the ancient Greeks was the fact that she was what they called a barbarian, i.e. a non-Greek. She was from the far shores of the Εϋξεινος πóντος (the friendly sea) which was what the Greeks called the Black Sea. Her story is tied the that of Jason (Jason of Jason and the Argonauts) and that is far too long a story to go into now. I'll talk about it in my next post. Long story short, Jason and Medea fall in love and Jason brings Medea back to Greece with him.

By the time the play 'Medea' begins, Jason and Medea have two sons. However, all is not right with their lives (and that's why it's a tragedy).

The play is set in Corinth, a city in ancient Greece. At the opening of the play, Jason has left Medea for Glauce, the daughter of Creon, the king of Corinth. Medea, of course, is distraught and furious. In her fury, she has threatened Glauce and, fearing for the safety of his daughter, Creon has banished Medea and her children from Corinth. Jason defends his actions by insisting that marrying Glauce was the right thing for him and for their family. He says that his marrying the daughter of the king of the land would have served to secure their future if only Medea had acted sensibly. Now, because of her rash actions, he says, she is banished along with her children. He offers to help her seek shelter in another part of Greece but Medea is in no mood to accept any help from him. She yells at him for abandoning her and their children and insists that his decision was made with only self gain in mind. Frustrated, Jason leaves her. Medea vows to have her revenge...and she does. What does she do? Find out in part 2! (Oh, that rhymes!)