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The Alienation of Medea

her struggles, Medea still ended up alone and separated from others. She questioned her outcome earlier, “What profit have I in life? I have no land, no home, no refuge from my pain” (Medea ln. 782-783, p. 711). Still, whether Medea is sincerely evil or abnormally educated, the people of society abandoned her because of her characteristics that set her apart from others. Because of these attitudes, Medea was an outcast to her surrounding societies, no matter where it was.

Because of Media’s alienation, it did not matter what she did since she was always going to be looked at as an exile or foreigner. This had a lot of impact on the closing of the story. Like Euripides himself, Medea seemed “to have lived a private, an intellectual life” (Euripides p. 693). Medea could have been Euripides way of expressing some of his own anguish about being an outsider himself. However, Medea went to the extreme by killing her children and the king and daughter. Maybe, if she was not so isolated from the society she was in, then she could have someone on her side to fight on her behalf and the conclusion of the story could have been different, but since she was alone, she had nothing to loose. Therefore, this story comes with many morals; A warning to the cheating husband, as well as, a reminder to people that to the world you may be just one person, but to one person, you may be the world.