A contradiction between rationality and irrationality exists in the case of everyone or everyone. In Greek tragedy, this kind of confrontation always exists in character behavior and decision. In many cases, there is always a role to behave rationally and resolve conflicts compared to other characters. Both Eumenides and The Bacchae illustrate discrepancies between rationality and irrationality, but their behavior and solutions are different. Eumenides depicts families by killing and killing, but Bacchae kills their families by unconscious killings driven by a forbidden desire.
In The Bacchae and Medea of Euripides, there is a big dual opposition between the two plays. Binomial opposition, such as good and evil, is the opposite of the two terms. Binomial conflict is used to present aspects of contrast (Marvin, 1). In The Bacchae and Medea, Euripides uses binomial opposition to emphasize central themes. The important binary opposition to be used is men and women, foreigners and citizens, and God and men. The contrast between men and women is an important opposition between the two plays.
The theme of The Bacchae is limited and it is clear that it is infinite. The symbolic wisdom of Dionysus and his followers is related to the recklessness of Pentheus and shows a deep relationship with infinity. If you confess to God, he will live even after death. If a person chooses to despise God, he will be restricted. Accepting and accepting beauty, happiness, and complete ecstasy is something everyone must do in certain aspects of life in order to keep it reasonable. Pentheus represents a tragic case of what happens when a person rejects beauty and happiness. There is a clear fight between the power of those who should not be alive. There are many people who choose to live like pentis around the world, their lives are short lived, so we have to learn from Dionysus.
Bacchae and Hippolytus dramas have many similarities and differences in character relationships. The similarity between Bacchae's Pechheus and Dionysus and the relationship between Hippolytus's Hippolytus and Aphrodite is the tragedy that God brought to these characters. These tragedies are caused by lack of respect for God. In either drama there is hostility between divinity and humanity. In both dramas God spoke of the opening line and expressed anger about being worshiped. In Bacchae, Dionsysus cursed his mother's sister because he did not believe his divinity. In Bacchae, Pentheus does not believe in the divinity of Dionsyus. Hippolytus has extra parallel lines. Hippolytus did not worship Aphrodite, it led Aphrodite to curse Hippolytus' stepmother, Fadra. An example of the curse of Hippolytus is Aphrodite. "I will punish Hippolytus today.