The scene that I chose to adapt to Medea's Children is the divorce scene. The dramatic conflict that I noted was that I wanted to understand what Little Jason is doing, but even if there was an answer I could not get a direct answer. In this scene, Little Jason asks Jason and Medea about divorce, but ignores him. He asked Little Medea who gave him various circumstances he called "divorce" including divorce of a person's saliva, a round-trip between a doll and herself, or a division of space and property.
The opening scene began with the divorce of Medea and Jason. The nurse is talking about the difficult moment of her mistress' experience; from there every drama is growing, emotions and emotions are changing, and the atmosphere and theme are changing. From the opening scene, you can feel the atmosphere of revenge and hatred, for example on line 15, the nurse said, "Everything gets worse now, the feelings become hatred." Euripides revealed controversy over mother-child relationships as nurses at the beginning of the scene lamented recent cases with Medea (including exile and husband's abandonment). Because of these events, Medea feels hatred and indignation against Jason, which is affecting her relationship with her children. Medea tends to do everything related to Jason; she began to feel negative about her children. "She hates kids and I hate to see them."
The scene that I chose to adapt to Medea's Children is the divorce scene. The dramatic conflict that I noted was that I wanted to understand what Little Jason is doing, but even if there was an answer I could not get a direct answer. In this scene, Little Jason asks Jason and Medea about divorce, but ignores him. When the drama was slowly unraveled, it clearly showed that she was loyal to her husband, but being an ideal Greek wife was not her actual nature. She is independent and, from its high quality, draws a line with Corinth's women. In the opening sequence, when someone scolded her, the nurse introduced Medea as a terrible woman. "Her mood is very dangerous and will not tolerate bad treatments because she is terrible.
Medea and Jason had two children, but Jason married the daughter of King Corinth who left Mediana and her children, leaving his personal ambitions. Furious with ruthless Jason, Medea gave her two sons a beautiful magic robe as a gift to Jason's new bride and made a terrible revenge. When the girl wore his robe, she quickly hurriedly burned the king with her and consumed it. Then Medea killed Jason and her two sons and flew away with magical tanks. This tragic last chapter on the story of Jason and Medea is Euripides' s "Medea" theme.