@article{b5487cb2dc654f239191cbd9f455e39f,
title = "Mother Medea and Her Children: Maternal Ambivalence in the Medean Plays of Marina Carr, Cherr{\'i}e Moraga, and Rachel Cusk",
keywords = "Medea, Greek myth, motherhood, play",
author = "Verna Foster",
note = "When Euripides's Medea killed her children, she gave birth to a seemingly unending number of literary progeny over twenty-five centuries. Euripides's play is one of the most frequently performed Greek tragedies in Europe and America and has generated numerous translations and adaptations throughout the world, because in both translated and adapted forms this play in particular lends itself to some of the most pressing issues that have engaged the cultures that have reworked it.",
year = "2021",
doi = "10.1353/cdr.2021.0003",
language = "American English",
volume = "55",
journal = "Comparative Drama",
number = "1",
}