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Buena Vista De Oedipus Essay Research Paper

Buena Vista De Oedipus Essay, Research Paper


Buena Vista de “Oedipus The King”


Do you have a great understanding of “Oedipus the King”? The understanding


provoked by reading this story is not accidental but intentional. Sophocles


wants the reader to walk away with condemnation and regret. The reader can


not help but to walk away from the book with a better understanding of fate.


The knowledge gained is going to be different for each reader. To


understand the story, an eye examination must take place. A diagnosis of


each character’s function and true self must be performed. Unless, the


reader puts on his or her lenses of interpretation they will suffer from


impaired vision


First, the main character, Oedipus according to the story is the greatest of


men and the solver of riddles. Well, Oedipus can only solve the riddle of


his own origins by revealing a truth too awful to bear. Knowledge is power


but the insight gained from the knowledge is painful. Oedipus is the


perfect example of this philosophy. Oedipus’ strive to see everything


blinded him but even in his blindness he still searched for answers.


Christopher Nassaar writes, “Oedipus is thus the patron saint of


philosophers, scientists, poets and artists – of all truth-seekers. Like


Mulder and Scully in the X Files, Oedipus knows ‘the truth is out there’,


but unlike them, he doesn’t expect to have his eyesight restored for next


week’s episode”(187)! Nassaar also writes, “Oedipus is an inspiration for


mankind: he must find out the truth at whatever cost, and then accept the


full responsibility for the knowledge he has discovered. Knowledge plus pain


is better than Ignorance plus bliss” (187). Is Oedipus fate predetermined?


No, all the choices made are by Oedipus. He chose to send Creon to Delphi,


to listen to the priest, to ask for Teiresias, to have the Old Shepherd


fetched. And his blinding was freely chosen, not unchosen. Sophocles needed


Oedipus to appear as a wise person. In order to do this he had him solve


the riddle of the Sphinx. During this time period only the wise and divine


knew the answer to riddles.


Secondly, Jocasta, the wife and mother of Oedipus is the perfect character


for the blame of the whole mess.


“Jocasta is a victim in Oedipus Rex, but not as much as she is a catalyst


for Oedipus’ own victimization. She keeps her faith throughout and tries to


relieve Oedipus of his. Because of this, readers may in turn pity her and


loathe her. But the gods tested the king of Thebes through her – the main


goal of the play – and both he and she failed.”(Boyer, “Jocasta The Pawn…”


57)


Throughout the play, Jocasta tested the beliefs of those around her by


feigning disbelief in the gods herself. At the beginning of the play she


can be seen carrying garlands and incense to the altar and tries to appeal


to Apollo to purify the city. Later, she denies her belief in the gods


totally. “While her faith remains strong, her task from the gods is to test


the faiths of others, especially that of Oedipus, which she does” (Boyer,


“Jocasta The Pawn…” 57). Boyer also writes, “Why, then, would Jocasta be


forced to perform such a dubious task for the gods? It is because she tried


to avoid an earlier prophecy. By tying her child’s feet together and casting


him out, she attempted to defeat the gods, and this of course angered them.


Her punishment, then, was to test the beliefs of the very child she cast


out”(“Jocasta the Pawn…” 57). All in all Jocasta is the perfect suspect for


the outcome of everyone’s fate.


Thirdly, Creon, is the bother-in-law of Oedipus. He is the perfect example


that the first will be last and the last first. At the beginning of the


story Creon is a messenger who is sent to Oracle at Delphi for an answer.


Sophocles uses Creon as a pawn to block the king’s path. As a pawn, he is


only used to spark a flame of angry inside of Oedipus. Creon is very


successful in putting Oedipus in checkmate. In the end he has taken the


throne and now sits in r

ule. Creon now has the power to send Oedipus as a


messenger to find the truth.


Teiresias who is beckon upon by Oedipus sets the action in motion.


Teiresias should be seen as a defensive chess piece in favor of Oedipus. In


Oedipus’ eyes Teiresias is just a blind beggar who knows nothing. The truth


is that even though he is blind, he sees and knows all. Putting too much


emphasis on Tiersias is not important because he only used as a pendulum to


set the clock in motion and to keep it moving.


In this game of chess, the shepherd would be recognized as the queens piece


because he is free to move all over the board and is very vital to the


winning of the game.


“Who ever really thinks about the Old Shepherd in this play? His part in


the story is extremely vital though. He took the three-day old baby from


Jocasta, who had told him to kill it. He claimed he couldn’t bear to kill


it, and gave it instead to his fellow shepherd from Corinth, from the other


side of Mount Cithaeron. He was one of King Laius’ escorts when he went on


his fateful visit to the oracle at Delphi, and witnessed the killing of his


master by Oedipus. He spread the story that a gang of thieves (and told


Creon and Jocasta this story) killed King Laius. He realized that the new


king of Thebes was the killer of the previous one and asked Jocasta if he


could be sent away from the palace. ‘He was a good slave – he deserved that


favor and much more.’ (Of course he did, she knew how helpful he’d been in


disposing of her unwanted child!) When forced to, he confessed to Oedipus


that he had failed to kill him as a baby, and given him to the Corinthian


instead” (Morwitz, “On the Road to Boeotia” 15).


Morwitz also writes, “But the more you think about him, the more wretched he


seems – a miserable little man too squeamish to carry out the orders to kill


the baby” (15). –Morwitz holds the perfect stance on the characterization


of the old shepherd.


The Choragos play a minor role in the story. They only question what is


going on. For example the Choragos asks Oedipus, “Doer of horror, how did


you bear to quench your vision? What divinity raised your hand” (Sophocles,


“Oedipus the King” 1272)? Sophocles used this character as a way to


emphasize the importance of what was going on during that time.


Lowell Edmund writes, “Why didn’t the Thebans simply shoot the sphinx with


arrows rather than stand by and see their fellow citizens devoured?


Ridiculous” (“The Sphinx…” 72) The Sphinx was used by Sophocles’ as an


attacker so that Thebes could be saved. A Sphinx is a rather large


creature, giving it the image of terror. Therefore setting in motion the


events to come. Sophocles needed a scapegoat for this action so he chose to


use the Sphinx. Had this story been written in medieval times, a dragon


would probably have been used.


Sophocles constructed these characters modeling them after real humans. So


the understanding that the reader grasp becomes different for each reader.


A reader must put on his or her lenses of interpretation in order to see


straight. The reader must understand that sight is not always great and


that being blind really opens you eyes to the truth with in oneself. A


diagnosis of each character will help the reader better deal with the


Oedipus that lives within them.


662


Boyer, Anthony. “Jocasta the Pawn: a look at the role of Jocasta in


Sophocles’


‘Oedipus Rex’” Parabola, Fall 1993 v18 n3 57.


Edmonds, Lowell. “The Sphinx in the Oedipus Legend” 1981 Comparative


Literature Studies, Winter 1997 v34 n1 71-72.


Mortwitz, Ernest “On the Road to Boeotia” Classical Philology, April 1996


V91 n2 15.


Nassaar, Christopher S. “Sophocles’ Oedipus The King” The Explicator,


Summer


Summer 1997 v55 n4 187.


Sophocles. “Oedipus the King” Rpt. In Literature and Ourselves: A Thematic


Introduction for Readers and Writers 2nd ed. Gloria Henderson, Bill Day,


and Sandra Waller. New York: Longman, 1997 1237-1277.

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