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October 28 – November 10: Medea
Euripides’s Medea challenges us to consider our institutions’ treatment of others and the potential long-run implications.

Medea is a challenging play that, while not really fitting the classic definition of tragedy, certainly leaves us with that feeling of waste by the end. While Oedipus the King might be a warning to a progressive generation, Medea attacks the old certainties that maintain an inequitable system of power that privileges rule by the father. In his attack on patriarchy, Euripides pulls no punches, giving the lead to a powerful woman, the play dramatizes disorder as Medea’s rage is refocused from a private vengeance to a very public one. Get ready for a ride.
Lesson Instructions and Explanation
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Due | Read | Do | Write | Test |
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11/04[1] |
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11/10 |
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notes
- ↑ Take 11/03 off and vote!
- ↑ You may write an optional extra-credit short lit crit response on Medea.
🕒 11-3-2020 | 📆 Make an Appointment | 💬 Ask a Question | 📣 Leave Feedback |