Oedipus Rex – Part 2, Exodos

Download Report

Transcript Oedipus Rex – Part 2, Exodos

Journal Topic
“Let the punishment fit the crime”
Essential Question:
What makes Oedipus Rex
a tragedy?
What is a tragedy?
• Definition:
– A serious drama
– main character of noble birth
– character is not all good or all evil
– strives to achieve something [worthwhile/noble]
– ultimately defeated
– defeat caused by error in judgment
Exodos
• Read the Exodos
• As you read, jot down the following:
– The sequence of key events of this section of the story
– At least 1 key quote that you believe is meaningful in
terms of our discussion of the story
– Your reaction (1-2 sentences)
Exodos
• Jocasta has killed herself
• Oedipus, enraged, seemed bent on killing her when
he found her hanging
• He takes the brooches from her gown and gouges
out his own eyes
• Wants to be led out of the city so that the curse
may be lifted
• Acknowledges his role/responsibility for his fate
Exodos
• Curses the shepherd who saved him
• Creon comes along and shows Oedipus mercy
• Oedipus begs Creon to let him live as a cast-off of
society on Cithaeron
• Asks that his children be taken care of (realizes his
daughters will live lives of misery)
• Oedipus is led into the palace (will he then be led
out of Thebes?)
Key Quotations from
Exodos
“The greatest griefs are those we cause ourselves” l.
1185
“Live where you can, be as happy as you can.” (l.
1455)
“Let every man in mankind’s frailty consider his
last day and let none presume on his good
fortune until he find life, at his death, a memory
without pain.” (ll. 1472-1475)
Journal Topic
What can a person learn from reading
Oedipus Rex?
Symbolism (revisited)
Oedipus – Swollen Foot:
A literal flaw
Limitations of power and strength
Fate - marked at birth
Failure to understand – check his name!
Symbolism (revisited)
Blindness:
Limitations of human knowledge and
understanding
“Insight” shown with defeating Sphinx –
blindness to his identity
Gouges out his own eyes
In the end – a man stumbling blindly through
life
Symbolism (revisited)
The place where 3 roads meet:
decision
direction of one’s life
3 roads – 3 parts to the riddle
3 headed god (Hecate) is the goddess of the
crossroads
Themes
The willingness to ignore truth leads to tragic outcomes
Teiresias: Oedipus is seeing but will end up blind
Oedipus was unable to see the truth—The moment
he saw it, he blinded himself
Oedipus ignores all the warning signs (Which
ones?)
Themes (cont.)
The limitations of free-will: We cannot control all of
what happens to us and so we must learn to do
what we can and accept what we must
Free Will
Fate
Themes (cont.)
The cause and nature of human suffering can, at
times, be traced to our own thought, actions,
desires, weakness
“The greatest griefs are those we cause ourselves”
“To perceive is to suffer.” - Aristotle
Catharsis
Definition: a purification or cleansing of the
emotions that brings about a spiritual renewal
How might the tragedy of Oedipus bring about such
a condition for the audience?
Key questions about the play
• Do you agree that Oedipus' tragedy happens because of
a 'tragic flaw'?
• How does Oedipus come to embody the riddle of the
Sphinx?
• In what sense is Oedipus, though a king, also an
"everyman" figure? In other words, how might this play
be said to explore something fundamental about the
limitations involved in being human?
Key questions about the play
• Did Teiresias really believe that it would be better for
everyone if truth were to remain undisclosed?
• Is truth always best known. Always best shared? Is it
always best for guilt to be made public? In government?
In marriage? In the church?
• Is ignorance bliss? Is bliss the greatest good?
Key questions about the play
• Why did Oedipus blind himself? Do you believe
his explanation for why he blinded himself?
• When did Jocasta realize Oedipus was her son?
• What lessons about being a king might Creon take
away from this sad story?
Key questions about the play
• What does the play teach about public life?
• What does the play teach about private life?