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Medea : A Novel by Christa Wolf — book cover
Fiction, World Literature, Fiction Subjects, Peoples & Cultures - Fiction

Medea : A Novel

by Christa Wolf
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Overview

Medea is among the most notorious women in the canon of Greek tragedy: a woman scorned who sacrifices her own children to her jealous rage. In her gripping new novel, Christa Wolf explodes this myth, revealing a fiercely independent woman ensnared in a brutal political battle.

Medea, driven by her conscience to leave her corrupt homeland, arrives in Corinth with her husband, the hero Jason. He is welcomed, but she is branded the outsider-and then she discovers the appalling secret behind the king's claim to power. Unwilling to ignore the horrifying truth about the state, she becomes a threat to the king and his ruthless advisors; abandoned by Jason and made a public scapegoat, she is reviled as a witch and a murderess.

Long a sharp-eyed political observer, Christa Wolf transforms this ancient tale into a startlingly relevant commentary on our times. Possessed of the enduring truths so treasured in the classics, and yet with a thoroughly contemporary spin, her Medea is a stunningly perceptive and probingly honest work of fiction.

With an Introduction by Margaret Atwood.  Translated from the German by John Cullen.

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Editorials

Kirkus Reviews

German novelist Wolf's discursive retelling of the familiar Greek legend, a logical outgrowth from her earlier novel Cassandra (1984), isþpace Margaret Atwood, who contributes an informative "Introduction"þa humorless and essentially predictable political allegory envisioning the reviled sorceress and murderer (of her children) as a victim of male arrogance and sexual insecurity. Medea's homeland Colchis is a "darker" counterpart to the kingdom of Corinth, a self-aggrandizing state that brutally distorts truth to justify its imperialistic crimes. Wolf offers a chorus of "Voices" hereþthe eponymous heroine, her weak-willed adventurer husband Jason, and other players in the drama of Corinth's power struggleþto chronicle the scapegoating of an insubordinate female goaded to become "immoderate a Fury, just what the Corinthians needed her to be." Overwrought, and markedly inferior to Wolf's better fiction.

Book Details

Published
April 1, 1998
Publisher
Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group
Pages
186
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780385490603

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