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The King's Achievement
King's Achievement - Dec 2025
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Dec 01, 2025 03:45AM
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Both.
I'll explain. It's possible that the villain of a literary work be at the same time a tragic figure. Without going in too much detail, I think Medea can be considered both things in Greek literature. In the legend of The Argonauts, she betrays her father, because she has fallen in love with Jason; and in the tragedy by Euripides, when Jason falls in love with another woman, she kills the woman and her father in a horrible way, and then kills her own children to avenge herself on Jason. I think she is clearly both a villain and a tragic figure.
I'll explain. It's possible that the villain of a literary work be at the same time a tragic figure. Without going in too much detail, I think Medea can be considered both things in Greek literature. In the legend of The Argonauts, she betrays her father, because she has fallen in love with Jason; and in the tragedy by Euripides, when Jason falls in love with another woman, she kills the woman and her father in a horrible way, and then kills her own children to avenge herself on Jason. I think she is clearly both a villain and a tragic figure.


