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Sophocles: Oedipus the King (Volume A). Sophocles. Athens, Colonus education golden age Peloponnesian War (431 B.C.E.) theater changes tritagonist . Aristotle’s Poetics : Tragedy. tragedy and imitation style: embellished, different parts catharsis
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Sophocles • Athens, Colonus • education • golden age • Peloponnesian War (431 B.C.E.) • theater changes • tritagonist
Aristotle’s Poetics: Tragedy • tragedy and imitation • style: embellished, different parts • catharsis • 6 elements: plot, character, language, thought, spectacle, and melody • plot: recognition, catharsis, reversal • unhappy endings • probability and inevitability • deus ex machina • chorus
Elements of Plot • recognition (anagnorisis) • catharsis • reversal (peripeteia)
Sphinx • feminine • merciless • cunning • lion-bird-woman
Adoption • Delphic Oracle • exposure • blood guilt • adoption • Corinth, Thebes
Tiresias • physical blindness versus visions and prophecy • judge for the gods
Politics • democracy • Oedipus/ Creon • Antigone • Oedipus at Colonus
Chorus/ Play’s Lesson “Don’t claim any man god’s friend until he has passed through life and crossed the border into death—never having been god’s victim” (lines 1744–46)
Discussion Questions Oedipus’s pride might be considered a tragic flaw, but does pride truly bring about his downfall? Looked at another way, could the pestilence afflicting Thebes be rooted out without Oedipus’s single-minded determination to solve the latest riddle, regardless of the consequences?
Discussion Questions Oedipus blames Apollo for bringing his sorrow to completion but claims that the act of putting his eyes out was his own. Certainly there is a sense that Oedipus does not deserve his fate, but what, then, is he responsible for, and what does the audience learn from the experience of the play?
This concludes the Lecture PowerPoint presentation forThe Norton Anthology of World Literature