Monday, 16 April 2012

What was the role of women in Medea?


"" was produced in Athens in 431 BC. Athenian society was what is often termed
homosocial; men and women had very different roles and educations and socialized mainly with
their own gender. Women were normally married at the start of their reproductive years (12-14)
to men who had inherited responsiboilities for running estates (30+ years old). Women were
responsible for weaving, food, and child-rearing, rarely were literate, were not allowed to
attend symposia (intellectual dinner parties), theatre or athletic contests, and had their own
quarters and many all-female religious activities and festivals.
Medea would have been performed by an all-male
cast of actors (including the role of Medea) to an all male audience at the festival of
Dionysius.

In the play, the nurse and Jason's second wife are women in
conventional Greek roles. Medea is a barbarian sorcerer, and acts as a sort of cautionary tale
of what happens in foreign societies where women are allowed too much freedom. For the male
audience, the evil deeds of Medea confirm their belief that women should be kept uneducated and
firmly subjugated to prevent their uncontrolled emotions from destroying family and civic life.
(Women might not agree with this judgement, but the play as written by a man for other
men).

No comments:

Post a Comment

To what degree were the U.S., Great Britain, Germany, the USSR, and Japan successful in regards to their efforts in economic mobilization during the...

This is an enormous question that can't really be answered fully in this small space. But a few generalizations can be made. Bo...