In Antigone and in Oedipus Rex‚ there are a lot of different themes and lessons that are developed throughout both stories. These themes are everything from simple life lessons to complex events that happen that shape the plot of the story. Both stories are very similar because they are centered off one big event‚ and the rest of the story involves the characters dealing with that event. In Oedipus Rex‚ that event is who Oedipus real parents are and who killed king Laius and in Antigone‚ it is Creon
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Oedipus Rex Throughout history‚ writers and philosophers have expressed their views about how the life of man is ultimately defined in their works. The Greeks have played their part in this quest. One of the great plays of the ancient Greek world that led the way for others was Sophocles’ Oedipus Rex. In this play‚ Sophocles shows us a chapter from the life of man. Throughout the book‚ he hints at the idea that life poses a riddle for man to solve thereby being a quest for the answer
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Dramatic Irony in Oedipus Rex In Oedipus Rex‚ by Sophocles‚ there are several instances of dramatic irony. Not only does this irony give the plot a rounder shape‚ but it helps the audience understand‚ or follow along‚ the plot better. Dramatic irony is sometimes used to intensify a scene or act. By doing this‚ the plot of the story‚ or play‚ is made more interesting. One example is Oedipus taunting Teiresias for his blindness‚ both physical and stellar. He says‚ "You sightless‚ witless‚ senseless
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Oedipus later finds out that even though he escaped his fate when he was born (when he was spared from death and crowned prince of Corinth)‚ the boundaries of his free will led him back to the inevitable fate that the gods had in store for him. When Oedipus discovers this‚ he cries out and says‚ “Apollo‚ he ordained my agonies‚ these‚ my pains… I did it myself! What good were eyes to me? Nothing I could see could bring me joy.” (Sophocles‚ Ln. 1467-1473) Here‚ Oedipus is blaming Apollo for his troubles
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An archetypical hero appears in every classical literature‚ as all characters share similar characteristics. The main character on Sophocles literature‚ Oedipus the king can be a considerable archetypical hero‚ as Aristotle once indicate that "A man doesn’t become a hero until he can see the root of his own downfall." Oedipus sets on several stages that omits him as a tragic hero. The first stage always begins with a special journey‚ where they commit a difficult task to overcome their maturity
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Oedipus has three nobilities that make him to be very noble; by his birth to Jocasta and Laios he is a prince thus an heir to the Thebes throne‚ by adoption to Polybus and Merope he is a prince and the heir to the throne of Corinth and by election he becomes the king of Thebes. Oedipus example is used by Aristotle as an example of what a hero should be. He said that a hero should be someone like Oedipus or other men of such greatness‚ who are highly prosperous and renowned (Eden‚ 2014). It is seen
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Timeless Literature Literature is timeless. Literary pieces can relate to everyday living even if they were written long ago. Also‚ literature contains techniques that were used long ago‚ and are still studied today. In a play called Oedipus Rex‚ written many years ago‚ Sophocles combines important lessons by telling a story of a royal couple‚ King Laius and Queen Jocasta‚ who birth a child‚ and send him to be killed after hearing about a curse that their son will one day kill his father and
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The Use of Blindness in Oedipus Rex Authors often use blindness both metaphorically and literally to describe their characters. In Oedipus Rex‚ Sophocles begins the play with literally blind Thebans suffering from a plague that their metaphorically blind king has brought upon them. Oedipus‚ being the king‚ is trying to help his blind Thebans. In doing this‚ he blindly curses the murderer of the late King Laius for bringing this plague‚ not knowing that the murderer is himself. When
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In the play Oedipus Rex by Sophocles‚ the themes of sight and blindness are developed in a way to communicate to the reader that it is not eyesight itself‚ but insight that holds the key to truth and‚ without it‚ no amount of knowledge can help uncover that truth. Some may define insight as the ability to intuitively know what is going to happen‚ or simply as the capacity to understand the true nature of a situation. Both definitions hold a significant role in the play‚ not only for more obvious
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locations of the setting mentioned in ancient mythological stories has often sparked many controversies. This is often cause by the author’s vagueness in the description of the setting where the story took place and the city of Thebes mentioned in Oedipus Rex is no exception. Questions can be raise on the location of Thebes in which the story took place in. Due to the fact that there are actually two different real life locations of Thebes; one located in Greece and the other located in Egypt. Since the
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