The requirements is in the appendix.

While answering these questions and attempting to understand the play and, especially, Medea herself, keep in mind that this isn’t really a play about killing one’s own children any more than Oedipus Rex is about sleeping with your mother and killing your father; the Greeks certainly already knew these were all horrible acts and they didn’t need plays to remind them of that. Instead, these are plays about the reasons otherwise good, noble, usually very intelligent and well intentioned people, commit horrible acts. Writ large, this and other Greek tragedies are about hubris and hamartia, complex conceptions of fate: how we are trapped in predestined, “scripted” roles.

There are a lot of these questions, so we're after concise, well substantiated (Make sure to cite quotations and examples in your answers!) answers for each. two pages

1) Sacrifice: One of the ways we’ve defined love is via sacrifice: the willingness to put another’s needs before one’s own. What has Medea sacrificed to be with Jason?

2) Hamartia. For both, make sure your answers show a full understanding of the nature and origin of one's hamartia:

a) What is Medea's hamartia?

b) What is Jason's hamartia?

3) Hubris:

a) What is Medea's hubris?

b) What is Jason's hubris?

4) Describe Medea, and then Jason's, love in terms of content and theory from The Science of Sex Appeal video: in what ways do these characters support the claims made in the video concerning gendered characteristics and love relationships, and in what ways do these characters undermine or challenge those claims?

5) Apply what we learned about jealousy to this text. Again, consider how it might both support and challenge current views on jealousy.