INTIMATE RELATIONSHIPS IN EURIPIDES’ MEDEA

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In recent decades, Classical Studies have seen a steady growth in women’s, gender, and feminist studies. Euripides’ Medea counts among plays on women which have attracted considerable attention. The Medea has an evergreen quality as it resonates with and provides insight into spousal experiences, touching on, amongst others, trust, fidelity, commitment, jealousy, divorce, loneliness, domestic violence, interests of children, and power play. This analysis of passages from the play builds upon psychological studies of Euripides’ characters that have been undertaken since the 1970s, while also drawing on more recent insights into the dynamics of intimate relationships from a social-psychological perspective.

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Repairing the effects of childhood trauma: The long and winding road.
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WHAT IS KNOWN ON THIS SUBJECT?: Domestic and family violence contributes to mental distress and the development of mental illness and can reverberate throughout a person's life. WHAT THIS PAPER ADDS TO EXISTING KNOWLEDGE?: Therapeutic work with people who experience domestic and family violence needs to take considerable time to allow the process to unfold. Understanding the triggers that cause past traumas to be re-experienced helps people to recognize and change their conditioned emotional responses. WHAT ARE THE IMPLICATIONS FOR PRACTICE?: Time needs to be invested to develop a secure and trusting relationship to enable a person to work through childhood experiences that have the potential to overwhelm. It is important for adults who have experienced childhood trauma to have an opportunity to process the abuse to help minimize its intrusion in their lives.

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