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April 25,2025
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The Ultimate of Greek Tragedies
8 April 2012

ttThis play is so messed up that a part of me says that it has to be based on true events. It is sort of like one of the arguments that people use regarding the authenticity of the Bible: every character (with the exception of Jesus Christ) is so flawed that one cannot consider that the stories have been made up. In particular we see the heroes of the Israelite nation, that being Abraham, Moses, and David, warts and all. However when us consider the Grecian myths we suddenly discover similar things here.

tThe story of Oedipus is that his parents received a prophecy that their child would kill his father and marry his mother, Laius, Oedipus' dad, and king of Thebes, pinned the child's legs together and left him to die on Mount Cithaeron. However, unbeknownst to him a shepherd found the boy, took him into his care, and then sent him to the city of Corinth to be raised by the king and queen there. However, years later when Oedipus had come of age, during a feast a man got too drunk and blurted out that Oedipus' parents weren't his true parents. Despite their pleading Oedipus left Corinth and travelled to Delphi to ask the oracle the truth. The Pythian Oracle, as usual, did not give him a straight answer and simply repeated the prophecy to Oedipus. As such, he decided not to return to Corith but to flee so as not to kill whom he believed where his parents.

tHowever on his way out of Delphi he is confronted by a rather arrogant man who demanded that Oedipus move out of the way. Oedipus tells him to bugger off and a fight ensures resulting in Oedipus' victory. He then arrives at Thebes while the city is being tormented by a sphinx who has a riddle that nobody knows the answer, but Oedipus correctly guesses it, kills the sphinx, and when word is brought about Laius' death Oedipus marries Jocastra, and lives happily ever after.

tActually they don't because without realising it the prophecy has been fulfilled. Further a great crime has been committed, and since a father murderer is living in Thebes the entire city is struck with a plague. Oedipus, who has become king, and is the hero of the city, decides to investigate. However his investigations quickly uncover a truth that is hidden from him and upon learning of this truth, namely that he killed Laius, who turns out to be his father, and married his wife, Jocastra, who turns out to be his mother, he is struck with the guilt of what has come about, Jocastra kills herself and Oedipus rips out his eyes and exiles himself from Thebes.

tWell, I have just told you the plot of the play without actually saying anything about the themes in the play. Well, there are two reasons why I outlined the plot, one being that it is a very complicated plot, and secondly to demonstrate how messed up everything is. This is not a simple Hollywood plot where everything is resolved in the end and everybody goes away happy. In fact it does not seem that there was really anything that Oedipus could have done to get himself out of the mess that he found himself in. In fact it seems that the more he attempts to get out of it the deeper the hole that he digs for himself, but it is not as if he could avoid doing it. He flees because he doesn't want the prophecy to come true, but there is a lot that he does not know and a lot that he is not being told. His step parents are not telling him the truth, and in hiding the truth, they are also making the prophecy come true. As for Laius, once again, everything that he does only serves to make the prophecy come true. While he attempts to kill his son, this fails because of the compassionate nature of humanity. It is the shepherd's compassion that prevents him from leaving Oedipus alone on Cithaeron.

tThe essay question that I answered on this play involved the question of fate and freewill. However there really does not seem to be any freewill here. Every decision that Oedipus makes only brings the revelation closer to being revealed. As a good king he simply cannot ignore the plague, and as a good king, he cannot do anything but seek justice and cleanse the city, despite the fact that he is the root cause of the problem. Despite the curse that he calls on the perpetrator, he must suffer the punishment himself, despite the pleas to the contrary. Oedipus is a just king, but despite his actions it is only when the fog is cleared and the truth comes out that he discovers that he is the perpetrator. Hey, he didn't even realise that the guy that he encountered at the crossroads was the king of Thebes, and his father.

tAristotle in his Poetics writes that characters in a drama should have a fatal flaw, but nobody seemed to have told Sophocles that. Granted Ajax may have had a fatal flaw, but Ajax is not Shakespeare, and is dealing with an issue that has nothing to do with his character. Ajax is dealing with PTSD (though not by that name) and Oedipus does not seem to have that fatal flaw. In reality, other than killing Laius at the crossroads (though some could argue that he did so in self-defense), Oedipus has done nothing wrong. In fact, if he had not investigated the cause of the plague then he would have been negligent. No, it is not Oedipus that has done anything wrong, but rather his ancestors. Laius is cursed and I believe that going up the ancestral chain further we come to a situation where an ancestor fed human flesh to another human, mostly as payback (I can't remember off hand who it was, it could have been Thyestes, but it could have been somebody else - one of Agamemnon's line is also guilty of a similar offense). In a sense then it is not the actions of Oedipus that brings about his suffering and downfall, but that of his father, and of his father's father. Poor Oedipus is only caught in the middle.

tOne might wonder what was so appealing about a story that everybody knows. Well, it is the same with us. When we look through the video store at all the movies available we discover that the plots of each and every one of those movies are pretty much the same. It is not the question of the plot, but how we get to the ending, and how the movie ends. We pretty much know that in around 90% of the movies available the good guys win and the hero gets the girl. We know that so we don't watch the movie for that, but rather how they get there, and how the good guys win. This was the same for the Greeks, and it is fortunate that we have versions of the Electra from the three great playwrights. In this we can see how the actual event differs and how each of the playwrights treated the subject. No doubt with Oedipus, both Aeschylus and Euripides would have explored different themes, and painted Oedipus in a different light, so that despite knowing the outcome, we arrive there through a different method.
April 25,2025
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Pensaba que me iba a costar leerlo por el lenguaje pero para nada ha sido así. Es muy fácil de leer, y aunque es una historia que todos conocemos hay algún momento de sorpresa.
La única pega que le pongo es que es muy corto, podían haber dado algún rodeo en lugar de ir tan al grano, pero aún así he disfrutado mucho leyéndolo.
April 25,2025
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I read this in high-school and found it devastating. Now being a father, I should probably read it as the pain of Oedipus would probably strike me even deeper. A tragedy which has spawned many, many children over the ages - perhaps the most notable being King Lear - but also a major influence on modern psychology as Freud read a lot into these ancient words and they helped him formulate his thoughts on human sexual development (for better or worse depending on which side of the Freud vs Jung vs Derida vs. ... divide you fall). A must read and a true page turner.
April 25,2025
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What can I say about Sophocles’ Oedipus Rex that has not already been said? Apart from the patricide and the infamous incest, this is an ancient tale of angst and overall calamity. But since I recently revisited it, this legendary tragedy hasn’t left my mind.
n  "Look and learn all citizens of Thebes. This is Oedipus.
He, who read the famous riddle, and we hailed chief of men,
All envied his power, glory, and good fortune.
Now upon his head the sea of disaster crashes down.”
n

I felt after reading the play that there was not really anything that Oedipus could have done to get himself out of his destiny. In fact, it seems that the more he attempts to get out of it, the deeper he is immersed in its inevitability. It is simply that there was no way for him to avoid doing it all and facing his fate. After hearing of the prophecy he flees because he doesn't want it to come true, but there is a lot that he does not know and a lot that he is not being told. His parents, when told by the oracles decided to sacrifice him. But he was saved by the compassionate nature of humanity. Later on, his step parents also leave him in ignorance, and in hiding the truth they are also making the prophecy come true.

The theme as I see it, therefore, is of fate versus freewill. However, there really does not seem to be any freewill here. Every decision that Oedipus makes only brings the revelation closer to being fulfilled.

But to fully understand Sophocles work, you have to know that for the ancient Greeks the word "tragedy" didn't mean “a lamentable, dreadful, or fatal event or affair; calamity; disaster.” For them the idea of such a play, that had a certain and defined theme and structure, is about a person that because of a single tragic flaw becomes the victim of the gods. The specific purpose was called "catharsis", the audience watching the play should gain an emotional release that made your own trivial issues fade into insignificance. According to Aristotle’s Poetics “the complexity of the plot is established through reversal, recognition and suffering.” The tragedy is created, in part, by the complexity of its plot which leads towards the catharsis. The Chorus is crucial; its speeches are revealing. It is the cautious voice of collective wisdom. And from the very beginning of the play, the Chorus revealed the omen of disaster. This can all be summed up in the following lines:
n  "O god-
All come true, all busting to light!
O light- now let me look my last on you!
I stand revealed at last-”
n

Oedipus is a passionate man, who asks questions and takes risks. Despite his flaws and his sins, Oedipus is good and always seeks the truth no matter how devastating. In the end, he accepts the responsibility for his actions, his fate and punishment. Does he have free will or the ability to choose his own path or is everything in his life been predetermined? Indeed, despite the prophecy, it can never be denied that Oedipus and his parents had made the choices, not the oracle or the Gods. Is the very idea of carving out your eyes, after discovering your wife is your mother in this incredibly packed tragedy that alleviates so much the enormous pain that seems so causeless? Is the existential angst finally satisfies by the human need to identify the guilty that alleviates our human sensation of utter, senseless and chaotic misery?

This is what torments us, being humans: we have free will but we can never control everything. Oedipus’s specific life events aren’t exactly relatable to any of us, but the sensations are not less pertinent. Aren’t we used to impending unconquerable doom? I ask myself, could ignorance lead us through hell? Oedipus Rex doesn’t make us only question the role of the gods (or whatever may decide our fate nowadays: politicians, the economy, the news, and even our own expectations!), but above all the argument of fate and destiny, and whether we are able to live without external powers deciding our chances. It also makes us question who we are; whether our personalities, or other personal characteristics, are a kind of destiny in itself.

Where's our human freedom? More important: do you feel a prevailing sense of inevitability, no matter what you do?! Why are we always being judged, by ourselves and by the world? If we try to transpose the play to today, many questions are still left with no definite answers. For certain, we can choose what we want to become. The curse is that our capacities are finite; we are not gods. What happened to Oedipus was the torture of being human, can we escape this curse?

Oedipus Rex is a literary masterpiece! Highly recommended!
April 25,2025
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Edipo Rey es la primera obra de la trilogía de Edipo, de Sófocles, escrita para los concursos de teatro de la antigua Atenas.
Cuándo es joven el oráculo de Delfos anuncia para Edipo un destino atroz, por lo cual sus padres lo envían a vivir a otra ciudad para evitar el cumplimiento del vaticinio.
Pero es difícil escapar al destino, y en este caso, cómo en muchas tragedias griegas, el hombre termina siendo una pieza cuyo destino es decidido por los dioses, a pesar de su intento por evitarlo.
Una buena obra, que me impactó un poco menos, por ser una historia conocida.
April 25,2025
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Τι φοβερό να ξέρεις την αλήθεια και να σου είναι ανώφελη.
April 25,2025
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This was by far one of the most entertaining books I've read for school.
Anything written about ancient Greece has all my attention, so considering Oedipus the King is the OG murder mystery and greek tragedy, I loved it. Short, and (not) sweet!
April 25,2025
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نمایشنامه ی ادیپوس شهریار ،داستان نیشخند تقدیر است آنچنانکه در داستان حضرت موسی و فرعون یا عزرائیل و حضرت سلیمان میخوانیم[ شخصی از ترس عزرائیل که پیاپی در مجلس سلیمان به او مینگریست از آن حضرت میخواهد با باد او را به هندوستان بفرستد تا از عزرائیل در امان بماند و شرح ماجرا در مثنوی مولانا :
دیدمش اینجا و بس حیران شدم در تفکر رفته سرگردان شدم
از عجب گفتم گر او را صد پر است زو به هندوستان شدن دور اندر است
چون به امر حق به هندوستان شدم دیدمش آنجا و جانش بستدم
تو همه کار جهان را همچنین کن قیاس و چشم بگشا و ببین
از که بگریزیم از خود این محال از که برتابیم از حق این وبال ]
ادیپ شهریار اولین قسمت از سه بخش کتاب "افسانه ی تبای" است؛ در این کتاب پیش از شروع نمایشنامه در بخش" درباره ی دانایی گنهکار و تقدیر او" مفصل درباره ی این نمایشنامه بحث شده و الحق برای من روشنگر و مفید بود و البته مکمل متن اصلی [ پر از داستان ها و شرح های تکمیلی]
هر چند داستان ادیپ شهریار به نسبت معرف همه هست اما به دلیل بیان جزئیات در این بخش مثل همیشه پیشنهاد میکنم این قسمت رو پس از متن اصلی مطالعه کنید
ما آگاهی و دانایی رو با توانایی برابر میدونیم اما تنها در صورت آگاهی کامل توان مقابله با رویداد ها و کنترل اونها رو کسب میکنیم و چون علم انسان به خود و به جهان اطراف در اکثر موارد ناقص است پس انسان در خطا و اشتباه ناگزیر است
از طرفی در دانایی رنج است اما گشودن راز تقدیر و ادیپوس بودن در باطن تک تک ما پنهان خفته است [ واقعا چه کسی میتونه دربرابر دانایی مقاومت کنه هر چند میدونیم "هر چیز را زکاتی است و زکات عقل اندوهی ست طویل"؟!]
بخشی هایی از کتاب :
*اپولون [خدای روشنایی و حقیقت]چنین رنجی در جان من نهاد اما نه به دست خود، این کار دستهای من است (خدایان خود تمام عوامل گناه را می افرینند، انسان کفاره ی خطای خدایان را میدهد. گناه تنها به دست آنان انجام میشود نه به اراده ی آنان! مطلبی که در سرتاسر این نمایشنامه موج میزند)
*مردی را به من بنمایید که سعادت او از رویایی خوش که بیداری تلخ گونه ای در پی دارد برتر باشد.
داستان از منظر مادر ادیپوس هم هولناک بود، کسی که " شوهر از شوهر زاد و فرزند از فرزند" یکی از جملات عالی کتاب در وصفش
در نهایت بی نهایت از مطالعه ی این نمایشنامه لذت بردم
April 25,2025
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“Aunque tú tienes vista, no ves en qué grado de desgracia te encuentras ni dónde habitas ni con quiénes transcurre tu vida.”

Con Edipo Rey me llevé una gran sorpresa para bien. El no conocer casi nada de lo que iba el argumento de esta obra me ha hecho disfrutarla aún más.

Coincido con los comentarios que he podido revisar después de mi lectura: la representación de una persona que no puede huir de su propio destino, un destino que ha sido escrito y no puede ser cambiado. La sucesión de acontecimientos en esta historia demuestra claramente esta situación.

Ahora no recuerdo bien, pero creo que este es mi primer acercamiento a un autor de la Grecia Antigua, aunque con tal elección fue desde luego un buen comienzo.
April 25,2025
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“The pain we inflict upon ourselves hurt most of all.”

The story of Oedipus, the king who is fated to kill his father and marry his mother, is one of the best-known Greek myths, thanks to Freud. I first read the play long ago as an undergraduate. In this rereading, I felt awed by Sophocles's skill as a playwright. The structure, pacing, and dialogue were brilliant, and considering that he was one of drama's earliest practitioners, the play is even more impressive.

I read and listened to a superb production on audible. I would love to see it performed. I highly recommend it to anyone interested in the classics or drama.
April 25,2025
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Nakon povratka ovom djelu... Ovo djelo staro dva tisućljeća je genijalnost. Ne dajem pet zvjezdica samo zato što imam kriterij da moram biti baš oduševljena i da imam osjećaj da ću se knjizi često vraćati i da je nešto posebno dotaknula unutar mene.
Ali da je ovo klasik vrijedan pet zvjezdica... Itekako jest.
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