Oedipus Rex

Posted on Jan 08, 2009 under xn--zqqs84h3is.com | edit
  • What's the significance of blindness in Oedipus Rex


  • Hi graham99! 'Oedipus Rex' (also known in many translations as 'Oedipus the King') is considered by many, including Aristotle in the wonderful text on dramatic writing, 'Poetics', to be one of the most perfect plays ever written. It has been performed, and thematic questions like yours studied and analyzed for centuries. As a result, there are some great resources online for and about the play! Let me preface this by saying that reading summaries and analyses will give you only a tiny understanding of or appreciation for any play, especially one of such heightened language, theme, and scale. I strongly encourage you to read one - or better yet several translations, if you have not already! You can find both an online and a downloadable translation by F. Storr through MIT's Internet Classics Archive at http://classics.mit.edu/Sophocles/oedipus.html . Since I'm not sure how familiar you are with the play itself, here's a link to brief synopsis from TheaterHistory.com: http://www.theatrehistory.com/ancient/oedipus001.html And here’s a longer version from ClassicNotes.com: http://www.classicnote.com/ClassicNotes/Titles/oedipus/shortsumm.html Now, on to the theme of blindness (and sight, its necessary counterpart.) There are two characters who suffer physical blindness in the play... Tiresias the blind seer (an obvious irony), and Oedipus himself, at the play's end. However, physical blindness is just one manifestation of the theme. Moral blindness, and blindness to/defiance of one's fate are equally, if not more, important, as you'll see in the pages below: Spark Notes' page on Themes, Motifs, and Symbols discusses the theme as it appears in all three of the Theban plays, Antigone, Oedipus Rex, and Oedipus at Colonus. ("Sight and Blindness" is about halfway down the page under Motifs): http://www.sparknotes.com/lit/oedipus/themes.html ClassicNote.com offers an excellent analysis of the play @ http://www.classicnote.com/ClassicNotes/Titles/oedipus/summ2.html . This excerpt most directly addresses your question: "Perhaps the best example of dramatic irony in this play, however, is the frequent use of references to eyes, sight, light, and perception throughout... Teiresias knows that Oedipus will blind himself... he says as much: "those now clear-seeing eyes / Shall then be darkened"... The irony is that sight here means two different things. Oedipus is blessed with the gift of perception; he was the only man who could "see" the answer to the Sphinx's riddle. Yet he cannot see what is right before his eyes. He is blind to the truth, for all he seeks it. Teiresias's presence in the play, then, is doubly important. As a blind old man, he foreshadows Oedipus's own future, and the more Oedipus mocks his blindness, the more ironic he sounds to the audience. Teiresias is a man who understands the truth without the use of his sight; Oedipus is the opposite, a sighted man who is blind to the truth right before him. Soon Oedipus will switch roles with Teiresias, becoming a man who sees the truth and loses his sense of sight." (Classic Notes has a ton of really great information on the play and the trilogy, Sophocles, the Festival of Dionysus (where the plays were first performed), and lots more - even a 40 question quiz! Definitely worth further reading.) I hope this answers your question! If you'd like any further help, don't hesitate to post a Request for Clarification. Best, Rebeccam-ga I picked my own brain, and searched for the following: oedipus rex synopsis ( ://www.google.com/search?sourceid=navclient&q=oedipus+rex+synopsis ) oedipus rex themes ( ://www.google.com/search?sourceid=navclient&q=oedipus+rex+themes ) oedipus rex blindness ( ://www.google.com/search?sourceid=navclient&q=oedipus+rex+blindness )







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