* showcase your critical thinking skills through analysis and insight and must demonstrate control of the topic at hand.…
Oedipus the King by Sophocles is about Oedipus, a man doomed by his fate. Like most tragedies, “Oedipus the King” contains a tragic hero, a heroic figure unable to escape his/her own doom. This tragic hero usually has a hamartia or a tragic flaw which causes his/hers’ downfall. The tragic flaw that Sophocles gives Oedipus is hubris (exaggerated pride or self-confidence), which is what caused Oedipus to walk right into the fate he sought to escape.…
The style of Oedipus the King is a tragic drama style that increases the readers desire to find the answers at the end of the story. This tragedy also helps put emphasis the themes of the play.…
Sophocles intentionally gives certain flaws in character type to Oedipus, he intends a downfall. That is the purpose of all ancient Greek drama: it is meant as a dramatic reminder of their mortality. Sophocles uses his plays in order to force people to learn at others mistakes. Oedipus tragic flaw brought about his demise. Three examples of this is his youthful pride, his argument with Tiresias and his argument with Creon.…
In Sophocles’ Oedipus the King, Oedipus is a man who exemplifies the typical tyrannical leader of ancient times. A man blind to the path his questions take him on. Oedipus is a character dominated by strong emotions, and it is the way in which he negotiates his feelings and reacts to information uncovered that makes Oedipus a legendary cautionary tale in literature. The famous stoic Seneca wrote his own version of Oedipus a few hundred years after Sophocles’ Oedipus. The tale remains the same yet we see an incredible change in the character of Oedipus. Seneca’s stoic roots give us an Oedipus that is far more in touch with emotions and his thought process. Sophocles shows us a man that believes he can solve any problem with a firm hand and a swift response, a man that is ignorant to many facts and signs that foretell of his guilt. Seneca’s Oedipus probes the people that bring him information, slowly putting together a picture of his guilt that he begins to actually suspect. It is the fear and great anxiety caused by each daunting question that give Seneca’s Oedipus a far greater characterization of a man.…
Oedipus was a proud man. After all, who wouldn’t be proud of defeating a Sphinx who was terrorizing an entire city. Ultimately, this pride he had within had eventually led to his downfall. This idea is supported by the Chorus’ direct quote on page 61 of Oedipus Rex. Here, the chorus says,” The man who goes his way/ Overbearing in word and deed,/ Who fears no justice,/ Honors no temples of the gods-/ May an evil destiny seize him/ And punish his ill-starred pride…” This means that Oedipus, the one being mentioned in the quote, has too much pride and that he should be punished for it, which clearly demonstrates how his hubris leads to his demise.…
“Oedipus the King” by Sophocles is a very good play which talks about a guy who was fated to kill his father and married his mother. Aristotle defines “tragic hero as a person of great stature and virtue who becomes aware of a mortal defect within himself.” This defect leads to great tragedy. Oedipus’s own essential nature makes him a tragic hero because his ignorance (lack of knowledge) led him to his own destruction. Also Fate plays an important role in make Oedipus a tragic hero because fate is a calamitous or unfavorable outcome or result; death; destruction, or downfall. (www.thefreedictionary.com)…
It's dark. That's the first thing Rex notices – it's dark and it's quiet. But he's awake and startled and scared, as though someone had crashed a pair of cymbals right over his head.…
According to Aristotle, Oedipus in the play Oedipus Rex by Sophacles would be a prime example of a tragic hero as he perfectly portrays the qualities of good, consistency and necessary or probable. The quality of good played by Oedipus in the play Oedipus Rex is a perfect portrayal for the element of character in a good tragedy. Aristotle discusses, "First, and most important, it must be good…the character will be good if the purpose is good" (Aristotle, 6). First and foremost, a character in a tragedy should be one who is generally good according to Aristotle and has a moral purpose throughout the tragedy. The city of Thebes is smitten by a terrible plague, withering the crops and decimating the townspeople. In their distress and agony they seek the help of their king, Oedipus. He comments, " ... I have not sent out servants to question you: I have come myself, Oedipus the King, to hear What it is you are seeking ... I have long known The City's agony; I have lain awake And frightened the grey dawn with troubled thoughts, Searching the means to end my people's misery....What his advice he brings from God, I shall obey it gladly, fair or sad" (Sophocles, 6-8). Despite Oedipus the King having high class in the city of Thebes, he is not egoistic. He is profoundly loyal to his people, and truly feels compassionate of their distress. Oedipus does not allow his egoistic instincts to get the better of him and continues to maintain his moral purpose of being good which ultimately is to support the people of Thebes and diminish any difficulties that have or may arise.…
During the evolution of humans, in every culture certain people are cursed from birth. In ancient Greece, these people were known as tragic heroes. The stories of these tragic heroes are known as tragedies, some of the earliest known tragedies are Medea and Oedipus the King. As stated in The Vocabulary of Ancient Greek Tragedy in Modern English by Francis Blessington the Greeks believed, “a hero must explicitly accept his fate. But in Greek tragedy, the hero or heroine or the play itself questions fate” (Blessington). The greatest example of this is Oedipus The King by Sophocles. Oedipus is considered to be the greatest tragic hero, because he has a great sense of hubris and he makes errors in judgement, which leads him to realize the sins…
Chemicals are in everywhere in part of our life. Chemistry is present in nearly everything we see and everything we do, our body ,our home and environment. Chemicals can keep our body healthy maintaining our life style and keep us healthy and safe. You probably wouldn't even be alive if it wasn't for chemistry. Chemical reactions are happening every second in your body, keeping you alive. Everything you hear, see, smell, taste, and touch involves chemistry and chemicals (matter). Hearing, seeing, tasting, and touching all involve intricate series of chemical reactions and interactions in your body. With such an enormous range of topics, it is essential to know about chemistry at some level in order to understand the world around us.…
Forbidden love or lust has played a role in society for centuries. Whether the works be religious stories, plays, or epic poems forbidden love is a reoccurring theme. In this anthology, the reader will find works of literature concerning forbidden love or lust in chronological order. The works span thousands of years, giving the reader the knowledge that the idea of forbidden love or lust has not changed much over time. However, there is also the idea that what may be forbidden love in one story, is not the same forbidden love in the other. There are different types of forbidden love, many of which are in this…
Aristotelian philosophy teaches that knowing material reality can be achieved by properly identifying the essential traits of things and distinguishing things from other things by forming classification schemes based on those traits. The theory's great power is that it canproduce useful, independently verifiable categories of analysis--if we all can agree on the epic's essential traits, then we can conduct reasonable scholarly discussions about epics. Since Aristotle also was interested (like his teacher, Plato) in the proper organization of human communities, from the one-family "oikos" (whence "economy") to the city-state of the "polis," he also tried to describe the social functions of literature. This continues to be an important line of study in modern literary theory. One of the method's weakness arises from disagreements about what, if anything, can be called essential from the start ("a priori"), outside some kind of social, political, historical processes that made it. A second weakness, shared by some practitioners of Structuralism (q.v.), is Aristotle's fondness for defnition and categorizatino by "binary oppositions": states which are supposed to be mutually exclusive (i.e., "live or dead," "on or off," in that you can't be both, but must be one or the other). Many of the oppositions by which he constructed his literary analysis are suspect or simply wrong, at least in our own era (e.g., "comedy or tragedy" has become confused with tragi-comedy and satire). Post-Aristotelian thinking tends to avoid relying upon unexamined binary oppositions and to look backwards, in order to situate literature's traits in the processes which created them, but otherwise we owe a great methodological debt to "The Philosopher," as he was known to medieval readers.…
Although he does not like to believe so, Oedipus has flaws. He is arrogant to kill a man over a traffic block, and he is stubborn not to listen to other people in his life such as his own wife and friend when they want to simply help the man. Oedipus’ characteristics are one of the reasons why Oedipus deserves such horrors to happen during his ages. His arrogance is a key factor which makes him deserve his tragedies. When he solves the Sphinx's riddle, it leads him to believe that he could accomplish anything that anyone throws at him. Oedipus also states, “…you all know me, the world knows my fame" (p.1290 line 8). Being arrogant causes the king to fall shortly after that. Secondly if Oedipus was not so stubborn, he might still see and listen to the world around him. Because of this characteristic, Oedipus cannot listen to Jocasta and Creon when they try to stop him from finding out the truth about his real life. His stubbornness eventually causes him to blind himself and then he is eternally unhappy and depressed. Ultimately, Oedipus deserves what happened to him because that is what he asked for.…
In Sophocles's Oedipus the King, the use of light and dark helps the reader get a better understanding of how Sophocles feels about certain things. He uses light and dark because they provoke certain feelings in people. The use of light and dark is to not only to symbolize happiness or sadness, but also becomes a metaphor for blindness.…