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Sophocles and KING OEDIPUS

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1 Sophocles and KING OEDIPUS
An Introduction

2 Sophocles 496 B.C.-406 B.C. Greek playwright and poet Wrote tragedies
Wrote Theban plays (The Oedipus Cycle) Concern the fate of Thebes during and after the reign of King Oedipus Introduced third actor Reduced importance of the chorus Group of minor actors who provide background and summary information to help the audience follow the performance

3 Thebes Ancient city in Greece
Setting for many tragedies, including Sophocles’

4 Terms: Aspects of Tragedy
Elements of Tragedy Unities Terms: Aspects of Tragedy Themes Tragic hero

5 Three Unities Unity of action- play has one main action it follows
Unity of time- play takes place within 24 hours Unity of place- play takes place within one physical space

6 Terms: Aspects of Tragedy in Greek Drama
Crisis of feeling - painful or harmful experience that may upset or depress the audience. Catharsis - the audience cleanses their emotions. For example, they may feel uplifted. Reversal - the hero/heroine goes through a significant change in fortune for the worse. Reversal may happen after a discovery of something previously unknown to the hero/heroine.

7 Themes Blindness vs. sight Self-knowledge Pride Truth Responsibility
Fate/destiny vs. choice

8 Aspects of the Greek Tragic Hero
Tragic hero/heroine - the protagonist, or main character, in the play. He/she must be of noble birth or hold an important social position He/she is generally good and has a desire to do well He/she dies in the end of the play

9 Aspects of the Greek Tragic Hero
The hero/heroine seems "better" than the other character(s), but there is a fate which overpowers this "good" character. Poor judgment by the hero causes a fall from grace and social ranking. Poor judgment is a tragic flaw, or error, called hamatria. It leads to personal catastrophe and unintended harm to others. Hubris, which means excessive pride or arrogance, is the most common type of hamatria. A hero/heroine's misfortune is an example of human fallibility (human's tendency to fail). Audience fears and pities character- punishment does not fit crime

10 Oedipus Rex Oedipus Rex is a play written by Sophocles that is divided into certain sections. Prologos: an introduction or preface, especially a poem recited to introduce a play Parados: is a song sung by a Greek chorus as it first enters the theater. It is named for the corridors at the front of the stage of a Greek theater from which the Chorus enters. Episodes: a section of a classic Greek tragedy that occurs between the two choric songs

11 Oedipus Rex continued Choric Ode: A classical Greek poem that has a three part structure consisting of a strophe, antistrophe and an epode Exodus: In Greek Drama, this is the final scene; in tragedy, it is the action following the final stasimon (choral ode); in comedy it is the final rejoicing following the last episode


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