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Oedipus Rex

Oedipus Rex, also known by its Greek title, Oedipus Tyrannus (Ancient Greek: Οἰδίπους Τύραννος, pronounced [oidípoːs týrannos]), or Oedipus the King, is an Athenian tragedy by Sophocles that was first performed around 429 BC.[1] Originally, to the ancient Greeks, the title was simply Oedipus (Οἰδίπους), as it is referred to by Aristotle in the Poetics. It is thought to have been renamed Oedipus Tyrannus to distinguish it from Oedipus at Colonus, a later play by Sophocles. In antiquity, the term "tyrant" referred to a ruler with no legitimate claim to rule, but it did not necessarily have a negative connotation.[2][3][4]

Oedipus Rex
Louis Bouwmeester as Oedipus in a Dutch production of Oedipus Rex, c. 1896
Written bySophocles
ChorusTheban Elders
Characters
MuteDaughters of Oedipus (Antigone and Ismene)
Date premieredc. 429 BC
Place premieredTheatre of Dionysus, Athens
Original languageClassical Greek
SeriesTheban Plays
GenreTragedy
SettingThebes

Of Sophocles' three Theban plays that have survived, and that deal with the story of Oedipus, Oedipus Rex was the second to be written, following Antigone by about a dozen years. However, in terms of the chronology of events described by the plays, it comes first, followed by Oedipus at Colonus and then Antigone.

Prior to the start of Oedipus Rex, Oedipus has become the king of Thebes while unwittingly fulfilling a prophecy that he would kill his father, Laius (the previous king), and marry his mother, Jocasta (whom Oedipus took as his queen after solving the riddle of the Sphinx). The action of Sophocles's play concerns Oedipus's search for the murderer of Laius in order to end a plague ravaging Thebes, unaware that the killer he is looking for is none other than himself. At the end of the play, after the truth finally comes to light, Jocasta hangs herself while Oedipus, horrified at his patricide and incest, proceeds to gouge out his own eyes in despair.

In his Poetics, Aristotle refers several times to the play in order to exemplify aspects of the genre.[5][6]

Context edit

Curse upon Laius edit

The misfortunes of Thebes are believed to be the result of a curse laid upon Laius for the time he had violated the sacred laws of hospitality (Greek: xenia).

In his youth, Laius was taken in as a guest by Pelops, king of Elis, where he would become tutor to the king's youngest son, Chrysippus, in chariot racing. Apollo, the protector of youth and boys, cursed him for raping Pelops' son. Chrysippus committed suicide.

Birth of Oedipus edit

When Laius' son is born, he consults an oracle as to his fortune. To his horror, the oracle reveals that Laius "is doomed to perish by the hand of his own son." Laius binds the infant's feet together with a pin and orders Jocasta to kill him. Unable to do so to her own son, Jocasta orders a servant to expose the infant on a mountaintop. The servant, moved by pity, gives the child to a shepherd, who unbinds the infant's ankles, and names him Oedipus, "swollen foot". The shepherd brings the infant to Corinth, and presents him to the childless king Polybus, who raises Oedipus as his own son.

Oedipus and the Oracle edit

As he grows to manhood, Oedipus hears a rumour that he is not truly the son of Polybus and his wife, Merope. He asks the Delphic Oracle who his parents really are. The Oracle seems to ignore this question, telling him instead that he is destined to "mate with [his] own mother, and shed/With [his] own hands the blood of [his] own sire." Desperate to avoid this terrible fate, Oedipus, who still believes that Polybus and Merope are his true parents, leaves Corinth for the city of Thebes.

Fulfilling prophecy edit

The old man edit

On the road to Thebes, Oedipus encounters an old man and his servants. The two begin to quarrel over whose chariot has the right of way. While the old man moves to strike the insolent youth with his scepter, Oedipus throws the man down from his chariot, killing him. Thus, the prophecy in which Oedipus slays his own father is fulfilled, as the old man—as Oedipus discovers later—was Laius, king of Thebes and true father to Oedipus.

Riddle of the Sphinx edit

 
Painting by Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres depicting Oedipus after he solves the riddle of the Sphinx.[7] The Walters Art Museum.

Arriving at Thebes, a city in turmoil, Oedipus encounters the Sphinx, a legendary beast with the head and breasts of a woman, the body of a lioness, and the wings of an eagle. The Sphinx, perched on a hill, was devouring Thebans and travelers one by one if they could not solve her riddle.

The precise riddle asked by the Sphinx varied in early traditions, and is not explicitly stated in Oedipus Rex, as the event precedes the play. However, according to the most widely regarded version of the riddle, the Sphinx asks "what is the creature that walks on four legs in the morning, two legs at noon, and three in the evening?" Oedipus, blessed with great intelligence, answers correctly: "man" (Greek: anthrôpos), who crawls on all fours as an infant; walks upright in maturity; and leans on a stick in old age.[8]: 463 

Bested by the prince, the Sphinx throws herself from a cliff, thereby ending the curse.[9] Oedipus' reward for freeing Thebes from the Sphinx is kingship to the city and the hand of its dowager queen, Jocasta. None, at that point, realize that Jocasta is Oedipus' true mother.[10] Thus, unbeknownst to either character, the remaining prophecy has been fulfilled.

Plot edit

Oedipus, King of Thebes, sends his brother-in-law, Creon, to ask the advice of the oracle at Delphi, concerning a plague ravaging Thebes. Creon returns to report that the plague is the result of religious pollution, since the murderer of their former king, Laius, has never been caught. Oedipus vows to find the murderer and curses him for causing the plague.

Oedipus summons the blind prophet Tiresias for help. Tiresias admits to knowing the answers to Oedipus' questions, but he refuses to speak, instead telling Oedipus to abandon his search. Angered by the seer's reply, Oedipus accuses him of complicity in Laius' murder. The offended Tiresias then reveals to the king that "[y]ou yourself are the criminal you seek". Oedipus does not understand how this could be, and supposes that Creon must have paid Tiresias to accuse him. The two argue vehemently, as Oedipus mocks Tiresias' lack of sight, and Tiresias retorts that Oedipus himself is blind. Eventually, the prophet leaves, muttering darkly that when the murderer is discovered, he shall be a native of Thebes, brother and father to his own children, and son and husband to his own mother.

 
Joseph Blanc, The murder of Laïus by Oedipus, 1867, Paris, Ecole Nationale Supérieure des Beaux-Arts.

Creon arrives to face Oedipus's accusations. The King demands that Creon be executed; however, the chorus persuades him to let Creon live. Jocasta, wife of first Laius and then Oedipus, enters and attempts to comfort Oedipus, telling him he should take no notice of prophets. As proof, she recounts an incident in which she and Laius received an oracle which never came true. The prophecy stated that Laius would be killed by his own son; instead, Laius was killed by bandits, at a fork in the road (τριπλαῖς ἁμαξιτοῖς, triplais amaxitois).

The mention of the place causes Oedipus to pause and ask for more details. Jocasta specifies the branch to Daulis on the way to Delphi. Recalling Tiresias' words, he asks Jocasta to describe Laius. The king then sends for a shepherd, the only surviving witness of the attack to be brought from his fields to the palace.

Confused, Jocasta asks Oedipus what the matter is, and he tells her. Many years ago, at a banquet in Corinth, a man drunkenly accused Oedipus of not being his father's son. Oedipus went to Delphi and asked the oracle about his parentage. Instead of answering his question directly, the oracle prophesied that he would one day murder his father and sleep with his mother. Upon hearing this, Oedipus resolved never to return to Corinth. In his travels, he came to the very crossroads where Laius had been killed, and encountered a carriage that attempted to drive him off the road. An argument ensued, and Oedipus killed the travelers—including a man who matched Jocasta's description of Laius. However, Oedipus holds out hope that he was not Laius' killer, because Laius was said to have been murdered by several robbers. If the shepherd confirms that Laius was attacked by many men, then Oedipus will be in the clear.

A man arrives from Corinth with the message that Polybus, who raised Oedipus as his son, has died. To the surprise of the messenger, Oedipus is overjoyed, because he can no longer kill his father, thus disproving half of the oracle's prophecy. However, he still fears that he might somehow commit incest with his mother. Eager to set the king's mind at ease, the messenger tells him not to worry, because Merope is not his real mother.

The messenger explains that years earlier, while tending his flock on Mount Cithaeron, a shepherd from the household of Laius brought him an infant that he was instructed to dispose of. The messenger had then given the child to Polybus, who raised him. Oedipus asks the chorus if anyone knows the identity of the other shepherd, or where he might be now. They respond that he is the same shepherd who witnessed the murder of Laius, and whom Oedipus had already sent for. Jocasta, realizing the truth, desperately begs Oedipus to stop asking questions. When Oedipus refuses, the queen runs into the palace.

When the shepherd arrives, Oedipus questions him, but he begs to be allowed to leave without answering further. However, Oedipus presses him, finally threatening him with torture or execution. It emerges that the child he gave away was Laius' own son. In fear of a prophecy that the child would kill his father, Jocasta gave her son to the shepherd in order to be exposed upon the mountainside.

Everything is at last revealed, and Oedipus curses himself and fate before leaving the stage. The chorus laments how even a great man can be felled by fate, and following this, a servant exits the palace to speak of what has happened inside. Jocasta has hanged herself in her bedchamber. Entering the palace in anguish, Oedipus called on his servants to bring him a sword, that he might slay Jocasta with his own hand. But upon discovering the lifeless queen, Oedipus took her down, and removing the long gold pins from her dress, he gouged out his own eyes in despair.

 
Bénigne Gagneraux, The Blind Oedipus Commending his Children to the Gods

The blinded king now exits the palace, and begs to be exiled. Creon enters, saying that Oedipus shall be taken into the house until oracles can be consulted regarding what is best to be done. Oedipus's two daughters (and half-sisters), Antigone and Ismene, are sent out and Oedipus laments their having been born to such a cursed family. He begs Creon to watch over them, in hopes that they will live where there is opportunity for them, and to have a better life than their father. Creon agrees, before sending Oedipus back into the palace.

On an empty stage, the chorus repeats the common Greek maxim that "no man should be considered fortunate until he is dead."[11]

Relationship with mythic tradition edit

The two cities of Troy and Thebes were the major focus of Greek epic poetry. The events surrounding the Trojan War were chronicled in the Epic Cycle, of which much remains, and those about Thebes in the Theban Cycle, which have been lost. The Theban Cycle recounted the sequence of tragedies that befell the house of Laius, of which the story of Oedipus is a part.

Homer's Odyssey (XI.271ff.) contains the earliest account of the Oedipus myth when Odysseus encounters Jocasta (named Epicaste) in the underworld. Homer briefly summarises the story of Oedipus, including the incest, patricide, and Jocasta's subsequent suicide. However, in the Homeric version, Oedipus remains King of Thebes after the revelation and neither blinds himself, nor is sent into exile. In particular, it is said that the gods made the matter of his paternity known, whilst in Oedipus the King, Oedipus very much discovers the truth himself.[12]

In 467 BC, Sophocles's fellow tragedian Aeschylus won first prize at the City Dionysia with a trilogy about the House of Laius, comprising Laius, Oedipus and Seven Against Thebes (the only play which survives). Since he did not write connected trilogies as Aeschylus did, Oedipus Rex focuses on the titular character while hinting at the larger myth obliquely, which was already known to the audience in Athens at the time.

Reception edit

 
P. Oxy. 1369, a fragmentary papyrus copy of Oedipus Rex, 4th century BC.

The trilogy containing Oedipus Rex took second prize in the City Dionysia at its original performance. Aeschylus's nephew Philocles took first prize at that competition.[13] However, in his Poetics, Aristotle considered Oedipus Rex to be the tragedy which best matched his prescription for how drama should be made.[14]

Many modern critics agree with Aristotle on the quality of Oedipus Rex, even if they don't always agree on the reasons. For example, Richard Claverhouse Jebb claimed that "The Oedipus Tyrannus is in one sense the masterpiece of Attic tragedy. No other shows an equal degree of art in the development of the plot; and this excellence depends on the powerful and subtle drawing of the characters."[15] Cedric Whitman noted that "the Oedipus Rex passes almost universally for the greatest extant Greek play..."[16] Whitman himself regarded the play as "the fullest expression of this conception of tragedy," that is the conception of tragedy as a "revelation of the evil lot of man," where a man may have "all the equipment for glory and honor" but still have "the greatest effort to do good" end in "the evil of an unbearable self for which one is not responsible."[17] Edith Hall referred to Oedipus the King as "this definitive tragedy" and notes that "the magisterial subtlety of Sophocles' characterization thus lend credibility to the breathtaking coincidences," and notes the irony that "Oedipus can only fulfill his exceptional god-ordained destiny because Oedipus is a preeminently capable and intelligent human being."[18] H. D. F. Kitto said about Oedipus Rex that "it is true to say that the perfection of its form implies a world order," although Kitto notes that whether or not that world order "is beneficent, Sophocles does not say."[19]

The science revolution attributed to Thales began gaining political force, and this play offered a warning to the new thinkers. Kitto interprets the play as Sophocles' retort to the sophists, by dramatizing a situation in which humans face undeserved suffering through no fault of their own, but despite the apparent randomness of the events, the fact that they have been prophesied by the gods implies that the events are not random, despite the reasons being beyond human comprehension.[20] Through the play, according to Kitto, Sophocles declares "that it is wrong, in the face of the incomprehensible and unmoral, to deny the moral laws and accept chaos. What is right is to recognize facts and not delude ourselves. The universe is a unity; if, sometimes, we can see neither rhyme nor reason in it we should not suppose it is random. There is so much that we cannot know and cannot control that we should not think and behave as if we do know and can control."[20]

Oedipus Rex is widely regarded as one of the greatest plays, stories, and tragedies ever written.[21][22] In 2015, when The Guardian's theatre critic Michael Billington, selected what he thinks are the 101 greatest plays ever written, Oedipus Rex was placed second, just after The Persians.[23]

Themes, irony and motifs edit

Fate, free will, or tragic flaw edit

 
A Greek amphora depicting Oedipus and the Sphinx, c. 450 BC

Fate is a motif that often occurs in Greek writing, tragedies in particular. Likewise, where the attempt to avoid an oracle is the very thing that enables it to happen is common to many Greek myths. For example, similarities to Oedipus can be seen in the myth of Perseus' birth.

Two oracles in particular dominate the plot of Oedipus Rex. Jocasta relates the prophecy that was told to Laius before the birth of Oedipus (lines 711–4):

[The oracle] told him
that it was his fate that he should die a victim
at the hands of his own son, a son to be born
of Laius and me.

The oracle told to Laius tells only of the patricide, whereas the incest is missing. Prompted by Jocasta's recollection, Oedipus reveals the prophecy which caused him to leave Corinth (lines 791–3):

that I was fated to lie with my mother,
and show to daylight an accursed breed
which men would not endure, and I was doomed
to be murderer of the father that begot me.

The implication of Laius's oracle is ambiguous. One interpretation considers that the presentation of Laius's oracle in this play differs from that found in Aeschylus's Oedipus trilogy produced in 467 BC. Smith (2005) argues that "Sophocles had the option of making the oracle to Laius conditional (if Laius has a son, that son will kill him) or unconditional (Laius will have a son who will kill him). Both Aeschylus and Euripides write plays in which the oracle is conditional; Sophocles...chooses to make Laius's oracle unconditional and thus removes culpability for his sins from Oedipus, for he could not have done other than what he did, no matter what action he took."[24][25]

This interpretation is supported by Jocasta's repetition of the oracle at lines 854–55: "Loxias declared that the king should be killed by/ his own son." In Greek, Jocasta uses the verb chrênai: "to be fated, necessary." This iteration of the oracle seems to suggest that it was unconditional and inevitable.

Other scholars have nonetheless argued that Sophocles follows tradition in making Laius's oracle conditional, and thus avoidable. They point to Jocasta's initial disclosure of the oracle at lines 711–14. In Greek, the oracle cautions: "hôs auton hexoi moira pros paidos thanein/ hostis genoit emou te kakeinou para." The two verbs in boldface indicate what is called a "future more vivid" condition: if a child is born to Laius, his fate to be killed by that child will overtake him.[26]

Whatever the meaning of Laius's oracle, the one delivered to Oedipus is clearly unconditional. Given the modern conception of fate and fatalism, readers of the play have a tendency to view Oedipus as a mere puppet controlled by greater forces; a man crushed by the gods and fate for no good reason. This, however, is not an entirely accurate reading. While it is a mythological truism that oracles exist to be fulfilled, oracles do not cause the events that lead up to the outcome. In his landmark essay "On Misunderstanding the Oedipus Rex",[27] E.R. Dodds draws upon Bernard Knox's comparison with Jesus' prophecy at the Last Supper that Peter would deny him three times. Jesus knows that Peter will do this, but readers would in no way suggest that Peter was a puppet of fate being forced to deny Christ. Free will and predestination are by no means mutually exclusive, and such is the case with Oedipus.

The oracle delivered to Oedipus is what is often called a "self-fulfilling prophecy," whereby a prophecy itself sets in motion events that conclude with its own fulfilment.[28] This, however, is not to say that Oedipus is a victim of fate and has no free will. The oracle inspires a series of specific choices, freely made by Oedipus, which lead him to kill his father and marry his mother. Oedipus chooses not to return to Corinth after hearing the oracle, just as he chooses to head toward Thebes, to kill Laius, and to take Jocasta specifically as his wife. In response to the plague at Thebes, he chooses to send Creon to the Oracle for advice and then to follow that advice, initiating the investigation into Laius' murder. None of these choices are predetermined.

 
Oedipus and Antigone, by Charles Jalabert

Another characteristic of oracles in myth is that they are almost always misunderstood by those who hear them; hence Oedipus misunderstanding the significance of the Delphic Oracle. He visits Delphi to find out who his real parents are and assumes that the Oracle refuses to answer that question, offering instead an unrelated prophecy which forecasts patricide and incest. Oedipus' assumption is incorrect: the Oracle does, in a way, answer his question. On closer analysis, the oracle contains essential information which Oedipus seems to neglect. The wording of the Oracle: "I was doomed to be murderer of the father that begot me" refers to Oedipus' real, biological father. Likewise the mother with polluted children is defined as the biological one. The wording of the drunken guest on the other hand: "you are not your father's son" defines Polybus as only a foster father to Oedipus. The two wordings support each other and point to the "two sets of parents" alternative. Thus the question of two sets of parents, biological and foster, is raised. Oedipus' reaction to the Oracle is irrational: he states he did not get any answer and he flees in a direction away from Corinth, showing that he firmly believed at the time that Polybus and Merope are his real parents.

The scene with the drunken guest constitutes the end of Oedipus' childhood. He can no longer ignore a feeling of uncertainty about his parentage. However, after consulting the Oracle this uncertainty disappears, strangely enough, and is replaced by a totally unjustified certainty that he is the son of Merope and Polybus. We have said that this irrational behaviour—his hamartia, as Aristotle puts it—is due to the repression of a whole series of thoughts in his consciousness, in fact everything that referred to his earlier doubts about his parentage.[29]

State control edit

The exploration of the theme of state control in Oedipus Rex is paralleled by the examination of the conflict between the individual and the state in Antigone. The dilemma that Oedipus faces here is similar to that of the tyrannical Creon: each man has, as king, made a decision that his subjects question or disobey; and each king misconstrues both his own role as a sovereign and the role of the rebel. When informed by the blind prophet Tiresias that religious forces are against him, each king claims that the priest has been corrupted. It is here, however, that their similarities come to an end: while Creon sees the havoc he has wreaked and tries to amend his mistakes, Oedipus refuses to listen to anyone. (The above text comes almost directly from David Grene's introduction to Sophocles I, University of Chicago Press, 1954.)

Irony edit

Sophocles uses dramatic irony to present the downfall of Oedipus. At the beginning of the story, Oedipus is portrayed as "self-confident, intelligent and strong willed."[citation needed] By the end, it is within these traits that he finds his demise.[citation needed]

One of the most significant instances of irony in this tragedy is when Tiresias hints to Oedipus what he has done; that he has slain his own father and married his own mother (lines 457–60):[30]

To his children he will discover that he is both brother and father.
To the woman who gave birth to him he is son and husband and to his father, both, a sharer of his bed and his murderer.
Go into your palace then, king Oedipus and think about these things and if you find me a liar then you can truly say I know nothing of prophecies.

The audience knows the truth and what would be the fate of Oedipus. Oedipus, on the other hand, chooses to deny the reality that has confronted him. He ignores the word of Tiresias and continues on his journey to find the supposed killer. His search for a murderer is yet another instance of irony. Oedipus, determined to find the one responsible for King Laius' death, announces to his people (lines 247–53):[8]: 466–467 

I hereby call down curses on this killer...
that horribly, as he is horrible,
he may drag out his wretched unblessed days.
This too I pray: Though he be of my house,
if I learn of it, and let him still remain,
may I receive the curse I have laid on others.

This is ironic as Oedipus is, as he discovers, the slayer of Laius, and the curse he wishes upon the killer, he has actually wished upon himself. Glassberg (2017) explains that “Oedipus has clearly missed the mark. He is unaware that he is the one polluting agent he seeks to punish. He has inadequate knowledge...”[31]

Sight and blindness edit

Literal and metaphorical references to eyesight appear throughout Oedipus Rex. Clear vision serves as a metaphor for insight and knowledge, yet the clear-eyed Oedipus is blind to the truth about his origins and inadvertent crimes. The prophet Tiresias, on the other hand, although literally blind, "sees" the truth and relays what is revealed to him. Only after Oedipus gouges out his own eyes, physically blinding himself, does he gain prophetic ability, as exhibited in Oedipus at Colonus. It is deliberately ironic that the "seer" can "see" better than Oedipus, despite being blind. Tiresias, in anger, expresses such (lines 495–500):[32]: 11 

Since you have chosen to insult my blindness—
you have your eyesight, and you do not see
how miserable you are, or where you live,
or who it is who shares your household.
Do you know the family you come from?
Without your knowledge you’ve become
the enemy of your own kindred

Tyranny edit

Oedipus switches back and forth calling Laius a tyrant (lines 128-129)[33] and a king (lines 254-256)[33] throughout the duration of the play. This is done as a way to make Laius his equal in terms of ruling. Laius was a legitimate king, whereas Oedipus had no legitimate claim to rule. Oedipus's claims of calling Laius a tyrant hint at his own insecurities of being a tyrant.

The tyranny brought down the way it was, what

"troubles" could keep you from looking into it?

For even if a god weren't forcing this on you

you shouldn't leave it festering so, and this

the case of a noble man, your murdered king.

Sigmund Freud edit

Sigmund Freud wrote a notable passage in Interpretation of Dreams regarding the destiny of Oedipus, as well as the Oedipus complex. He analyzes why this play, Oedipus Rex, written in Ancient Greece, is so effective even to a modern audience:[34]: 279–280 

"His destiny moves us only because it might have been ours — because the oracle laid the same curse upon us before our birth as upon him. It is the fate of all of us, perhaps, to direct our first sexual impulse towards our mother and our first hatred and our first murderous wish against our father. Our dreams convince us that this is so."

Freud goes on to indicate, however, that the “primordial urges and fears” that are his concern are not found primarily in the play by Sophocles, but exist in the myth the play is based on. He refers to Oedipus Rex as a “further modification of the legend,” one that originates in a “misconceived secondary revision of the material, which has sought to exploit it for theological purposes.”[34]: 247 [35][36]

Parsifal edit

The Parsifal story is the "reverse" of the Oedipus myth (cf., Claude Lévi-Strauss).[37]

Adaptations edit

Film adaptions edit

The first English-language adaption, Oedipus Rex (1957), was directed by Tyrone Guthrie and starred Douglas Campbell as Oedipus. In this version, the entire play is performed by the cast in masks (Greek: prosopon), as actors did in ancient Greek theatre.

The second English-language film version, Oedipus the King (1968), was directed by Philip Saville and filmed in Greece. Unlike Guthrie's film, this version shows the actors' faces, as well as boasting an all-star cast, including Christopher Plummer as Oedipus; Lilli Palmer as Jocasta; Orson Welles as Tiresias; Richard Johnson as Creon; Roger Livesey as the Shepherd; and Donald Sutherland as the Leading Member of the Chorus. Sutherland's voice, however, was dubbed by another actor. The film went a step further than the play by actually showing, in flashback, the murder of Laius (portrayed by Friedrich Ledebur). It also shows Oedipus and Jocasta in bed together, making love. Though released in 1968, this film was not seen in Europe or the US until the 1970s and 1980s after legal release and distribution rights were granted to video and television.

In Italy, Pier Paolo Pasolini directed Edipo Re (1967), a modern interpretation of the play.

Toshio Matsumoto's film, Funeral Parade of Roses (1969), is a loose adaptation of the play and an important work of the Japanese New Wave.

In Colombia, writer Gabriel García Márquez adapted the story in Edipo Alcalde, bringing it to the real-world situation of Colombia at the time.

The Nigerian film The Gods are STILL not to Blame (2012) was produced by Funke Fayoyin, premiering at Silverbird Galleria in Lagos.

Park Chan-wook's South Korean film, Oldboy (2003), was inspired by the play while making several notable changes to allow it to work in a modern South-Korean setting.[38] The film even alters the iconic twist, causing many American critics to overlook the connection. It received widespread acclaim, and is seen in South Korea as the definitive adaptation.[citation needed]

Stage adaptions edit

 
Play by the Celje Slovene People's Theatre in 1968

The composer Igor Stravinsky wrote the opera-oratorio Oedipus Rex, which premiered in 1927 at the Théâtre Sarah Bernhardt, Paris. It is scored for orchestra, speaker, soloists, and male chorus. The libretto, based on Sophocles's tragedy, was written by Jean Cocteau in French and then translated by Abbé Jean Daniélou into Latin. The narration, however, is performed in the language of the audience. The work was written towards the beginning of Stravinsky's neoclassical period and is considered one of the finest works from this phase of the composer's career. He had considered setting the language of the work in Ancient Greek, but decided ultimately on Latin, as "a medium not dead but turned to stone."

Nigerian writer Ola Rotimi adapted Oedipus Rex into a 1968 play and novel, titling it The Gods Are Not to Blame. In 2012, the play was further adapted by Otun Rasheed, under the title The Gods Are STILL Not to Blame.

Dancer and choreographer Martha Graham adapted Oedipus Rex into a short ballet entitled Night Journey, premiering in 1947. In this adaptation, the action focuses not on Oedipus, but upon Jocasta, reflecting on her strange destiny.[39][40]

TV/radio adaptions edit

Don Taylor's 1986 translation/adaptation of Oedipus Rex using the English title Oedipus the King formed part of the BBC's Theban Plays trilogy. It starred Michael Pennington as Oedipus, with Claire Bloom as Jocasta, John Gielgud as Tiresias, and John Shrapnel as Creon. The actors performed in modern dress.

In 1977, CBS Radio Mystery Theater broadcast a version of the story called "So Shall Ye Reap," set in 1851 in what was then the U.S. Territory of New Mexico.

In 1987, Brazilian TV Globo broadcast the soap opera Mandala a loose adaptation set in Brazil modern times starring Vera Fischer as Jocasta.

In 2017, BBC Radio 3 broadcast a production of Anthony Burgess' translation of the play with Christopher Eccleston as Oedipus and Fiona Shaw as Tiresias/Second Elder. John Shrapnel, who starred as Creon in the 1986 BBC television version, played the First Elder.

Other television portrayals of Oedipus include that of Christopher Plummer (1957), Ian Holm (1972), and Patrick Stewart (1977).

Parodies edit

Peter Schickele parodies both the story of Oedipus Rex and the music of Stravinsky's opera-oratorio of the same name in Oedipus Tex, a Western-themed oratorio purportedly written by P.D.Q. Bach. It was released in 1990 on the album Oedipus Tex and Other Choral Calamities.

Chrysanthos Mentis Bostantzoglou makes a parody of the tragedy in his comedy Medea (1993).[41]

In episode ten of the second season of the Australian satirical comedy show CNNNN, a short animation in the style of a Disney movie trailer, complete with jaunty music provided by Andrew Hansen, parodies Oedipus Rex.[42] Apart from being advertised as "fun for the whole family," the parody is also mentioned at other times during that same episode, such as in a satirical advertisement in which orphans are offered a free "Oedipus Rex ashes urn" as a promotional offer after losing a relative.[43]

John Barth's novel Giles Goat-Boy contains a forty-page parody of the full text of Oedipus Rex called Taliped Decanus.

Tom Lehrer wrote and performed a comedic song based upon Oedipus Rex in 1959.

Bo Burnham references Oedipus in songs "Words Words Words" and "Rant", both part of his album, Words Words Words.

Editions edit

Translations edit

  • Thomas Francklin, 1759 – verse
  • Edward H. Plumptre, 1865 – verse: full text at Wikisource, rev. edition of 1878
  • Richard C. Jebb, 1904 – prose: full text at Wikisource
  • Sir George Young, 1906 – verse
  • Gilbert Murray, 1911 – verse
  • Francis Storr, 1912 – verse: full text
  • W. B. Yeats, 1928 – mixed prose and verse
  • David Grene, 1942 (revised ed. 1991) – verse
  • E. F. Watling, 1947 – verse
  • Dudley Fitts and Robert Fitzgerald, 1949 – verse
  • F. L. Lucas, 1954 — verse
  • Theodore Howard Banks, 1956 – verse
  • Albert Cook, 1957 – verse
  • Bernard Knox, 1959 – prose
  • H. D. F. Kitto, 1962 – verse
  • Luci Berkowitz and Theodore F. Brunner, 1970 – prose
  • Anthony Burgess, 1972 – prose and verse
  • Stephen Berg and Diskin Clay, 1978 – verse
  • Robert Bagg, 1982 (revised ed. 2004) – verse
  • Robert Fagles, 1984, The Three Theban Plays: Antigone; Oedipus the King; Oedipus at Colonus. Penguin classics. ISBN 9781101042694
  • Don Taylor, 1986 – prose
  • Nick Bartel, 1999 – verse:
  • Kenneth McLeish, 2001 – verse
  • Ian Johnston, 2004 – verse: full text 2011-07-19 at the Wayback Machine
  • George Theodoridis, 2005 – prose: full text
  • J. E. Thomas, 2006 – verse
  • Ian C. Johnston, 2007 – verse: full text
  • David Mulroy, 2011 – verse
  • Rachel Pollack and David Vine, 2011 – verse
  • Frank Nisetich, 2016 – verse
  • David Kovacs, 2020 – verse. OUP Oxford. ISBN 978-0198854838
  • Bryan Doerries, 2021 – verse. ISBN 0593314956 [44]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Although Sophocles won second prize with the group of plays that included Oedipus Rex, its date of production is uncertain. The prominence of the Theban plague at the play's opening suggests to many scholars a reference to the plague that devastated Athens in 430 BC, and hence a production date shortly thereafter. See, for example, Knox, Bernard (1956). "The Date of the Oedipus Tyrannus of Sophocles". American Journal of Philology. 77 (2): 133–147. doi:10.2307/292475. JSTOR 292475.
  2. ^ Bridgewater, William, ed. "tyrant". The Columbia Encyclopedia. Columbia University Press. (1963) p. 2188
  3. ^ Lloyd-Jones, Hugh. Introduction and trans. Sophocles: Ajax, Electra, Oedipus Tyrannus. By Sophocles. Loeb Classical Library ser. vol. 20. Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0674995574.
  4. ^ Mulroy, David. trans. “Introduction”. Sophocles, Oedipus Rex. Univ of Wisconsin Press, (2011) ISBN 9780299282530. p. xxviii
  5. ^ Aristotle: Poetics. Edited and translated by St. Halliwell, (Loeb Classical Library), Harvard 1995
  6. ^ Belfiore, Elizabeth (1992). Tragic Pleasures: Aristotle on Plot and Emotion. Princeton. p. 176. ISBN 9780691068992.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  7. ^ . The Walters Art Museum. Archived from the original on 2013-05-24. Retrieved 2012-09-18.
  8. ^ a b Powell, Barry B. (2015). Classical Myth. with translations by Herbert M. Howe (8th ed.). Boston: Pearson. ISBN 978-0-321-96704-6.
  9. ^ Ahl, Frederick. Two Faces of Oedipus: Sophocles' Oedipus Tyrannus and Seneca's Oedipus. Cornell University Press, 2008. page 1. ISBN 9780801473975.
  10. ^ . Archived from the original on 2020-11-06. Retrieved 2016-03-31.
  11. ^ Herodotus, in his Histories (Book 1.32), attributes this maxim to Solon, the Athenian statesman and lawgiver.
  12. ^ Dawe, R.D. ed. 2006 Sophocles: Oedipus Rex, revised edition. Cambridge : Cambridge University Press. p.1
  13. ^ Smith, Helaine (2005). Masterpieces of Classic Greek Drama. Greenwood. p. 1. ISBN 978-0-313-33268-5.
  14. ^ Thomas, J.E. & Osborne, E. (2004). Oedipus Rex: Literary Touchstone Edition. Prestwick House Inc. p. 69. ISBN 978-1-58049-593-6.
  15. ^ Jebb, R.C. (July 2010). The Oedipus Tyrannus. Read Books Design. p. v. ISBN 978-1-4460-3178-0.
  16. ^ Whitman, C. (1951). Sophocles. Harvard University Press. p. 123. ISBN 9780674821408.
  17. ^ Whitman, C. (1951). Sophocles. Harvard University Press. p. 143. ISBN 9780674821408.
  18. ^ Hall, E. (1994). "Introduction". Sophocles: Antigone, Oedipus the King, Electra. Oxford University Press. pp. xix–xxii. ISBN 0-19-282922-X.
  19. ^ Kitto, H.D.F (1966). Greek Tragedy. Routledge. p. 144. ISBN 0-415-05896-1.
  20. ^ a b Kitto, H.D.F (1966). Poiesis. University of California Press. pp. 236–242.
  21. ^ Don Nardo, Greek and Roman Mythology, p 205.
  22. ^ Thomas Wolfe, Arlyn Bruccoli, Matthew Joseph Bruccoli, O Lost: A Story of the Buried Life, p 460.
  23. ^ . The Guardian. 2 September 2015. Archived from the original on 23 July 2021.
  24. ^ Smith, Helaine (2005). Masterpieces of Classic Greek Drama. Greenwood. p. 82. ISBN 978-0-313-33268-5.
  25. ^ See Dodds 1966; Mastronarde 1994, 19; Gregory 2005, 323.
  26. ^ Thus Sir Richard Jebb in his commentary. Cf. Jeffrey Rusten's 1990 commentary.
  27. ^ Greece & Rome, 2nd Ser., Vol. 13, No. 1 (Apr., 1966), pp. 37–49
  28. ^ Strictly speaking, this is inaccurate: Oedipus himself sets these events in motion when he decides to investigate his parentage against the advice of Polybus and Merope.
  29. ^ Brunner M. "King Oedipus Retried" Rosenberger & Krausz, London, 2001. ISBN 0-9536219-1-X
  30. ^ Theodoridis, G. (2005). Oedipus Rex (Oedipus Tyrannus, Tyrannos, King, Vasileus) Οιδίπους Τύραννος. Retrieved from Bacchicstage: https://bacchicstage.wordpress.com/sophocles/oedipus-rex/ Note: this source is assumed as reliable, as it is provided in Powell (2015), a university-course-level textbook.
  31. ^ Glassbery, Roy (April 2017). "Uses of Hamartia, Flaw, and Irony in Oedipus Tyrannus and King Lear". Philosophy and Literature. 41 (1): 201–206. doi:10.1353/phl.2017.0013. S2CID 171691936.
  32. ^ Johnston, Ian, ed. Oedipus the King. Saint Louis: Saint Louis Public Schools, 2004. https://www.slps.org/site/handlers/filedownload.ashx?moduleinstanceid=22453&dataid=25126&FileName=Sophocles-Oedipus.pdf .
  33. ^ a b Romm, James (2017). The Greek Plays. Modern Library. ISBN 9780812983098.
  34. ^ a b Freud, S. 2010. The Interpretation of Dreams. New York: Basic Books. 978-0465019779.
  35. ^ Fagles, Robert, “Introduction”. Sophocles. The Three Theban Plays. Penguin Classics (1984) ISBN 978-0140444254. page 132
  36. ^ Dodds, E. R. “On Misunderstanding the Oedipus Rex”. The Ancient Concept of Progress. Oxford Press. (1973) ISBN 978-0198143772. page 70
  37. ^ Staude, John Raphael (1976). "From Depth Psychology to Depth Sociology: Freud, Jung, and Lévi-Strauss". Theory and Society. 3 (3): 303–338. doi:10.1007/BF00159490. JSTOR 656968. S2CID 144353437. Retrieved 2022-06-28. Levi-Strauss has noted how the Parsifal story is the reverse of the Oedipus Legend.
  38. ^ "Sympathy for the Old Boy... An Interview with Park Chan Wook" by Choi Aryong
  39. ^ Jowitt, Deborah (1998), "Graham, Martha", in Cohen, Selma Jeanne (ed.), The International Encyclopedia of Dance, Oxford University Press, doi:10.1093/acref/9780195173697.001.0001, ISBN 978-0-19-517369-7, retrieved 2021-11-11
  40. ^ Yaari, Nurit (2003). "Myth into Dance: Martha Graham's Interpretation of the Classical Tradition". International Journal of the Classical Tradition. 10 (2): 221–242. doi:10.1007/s12138-003-0009-x. ISSN 1073-0508. JSTOR 30221918. S2CID 161604574.
  41. ^ Kaggelaris, N. (2016), "Sophocles' Oedipus in Mentis Bostantzoglou's Medea" [in Greek] in Mastrapas, A. N. - Stergioulis, M. M. (eds.) Seminar 42: Sophocles the great classic of tragedy , Athens: Koralli, pp. 74- 81 [1]
  42. ^ The Chaser Archive (2011-10-13), CNNNN - Season 2 Episode 10, retrieved 2018-02-14
  43. ^ The Chaser Archive (2011-10-13), CNNNN - Season 2 Episode 10, retrieved 2018-02-14
  44. ^ Sophocles, Doerries. (2021). Oedipus Trilogy, New Versions of Oedipus the King, Oedipus at Colonus, Antigone: Vol. First Vintage books edition. Vintage.

Further reading edit

  • Brunner, M. 2001. King Oedipus Retried. London: Rosenberger & Krausz.
  • Cairns, D. L. 2013. "Divine and Human Action in the Oedipus Tyrannus." In Tragedy and Archaic Greek Thought. Edited by D. L. Cairns, 119–171. Swansea, UK: Classical Press of Wales.
  • Coughanowr, Effie. 1997. "Philosophic Meaning in Sophocles' Oedipus Rex." L'Antiquité Classique 66: 55–74.
  • Easterling, P. E. 1989. "City Settings in Greek Poetry." Proceedings of the Classical Association 86:5–17.
  • Edmunds, L. 2006. Oedipus. London and New York: Routledge.
  • Finglass, P. J. 2009. "The Ending of Sophocles’ Oedipus Rex." Philologus 153:42–62.
  • Goldhill, S. 2009. Sophocles and the Language of Tragedy. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  • Halliwell, S. 1986. "Where Three Roads Meet: A Neglected Detail in the Oedipus Tyrannus." Journal of Hellenic Studies 106:187–190.
  • Lawrence, S. 2008. "Apollo and his Purpose in Sophocles’ Oedipus Tyrannus." Studia Humaniora Tartuensia 9:1–18.
  • Macintosh, F. 2009. Sophocles: Oedipus Tyrannus. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge Univ. Press.
  • Segal, C. P. 2001. Oedipus Tyrannus: Tragic Heroism and the Limits of Knowledge. 2d ed. New York and Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  • Sommerstein, A. H. 2011. "Sophocles and the Guilt of Oedipus." Cuadernos de Filología Clásica. Estudios griegos e indoeuropeos 21:103–117.

External links edit

  • Oedipus Tyrannus at Perseus Digital Library
  • Aristotle's Poetics: Notes on Sophocles' Oedipus 2018-09-30 at the Wayback Machine, cached version of the original
  • Full text English translation of Oedipus the King by Ian Johnston, in verse 2011-07-19 at the Wayback Machine
  • Oedipus the King Book Notes 2008-09-16 at the Wayback Machine from Literapedia
  • Oedipus the King from Project Gutenberg
  •   Oedipus Rex public domain audiobook at LibriVox

oedipus, this, article, about, play, sophocles, other, uses, disambiguation, also, known, greek, title, oedipus, tyrannus, ancient, greek, Οἰδίπους, Τύραννος, pronounced, oidípoːs, týrannos, oedipus, king, athenian, tragedy, sophocles, that, first, performed, . This article is about the play by Sophocles For other uses see Oedipus Rex disambiguation Oedipus Rex also known by its Greek title Oedipus Tyrannus Ancient Greek Oἰdipoys Tyrannos pronounced oidipoːs tyrannos or Oedipus the King is an Athenian tragedy by Sophocles that was first performed around 429 BC 1 Originally to the ancient Greeks the title was simply Oedipus Oἰdipoys as it is referred to by Aristotle in the Poetics It is thought to have been renamed Oedipus Tyrannus to distinguish it from Oedipus at Colonus a later play by Sophocles In antiquity the term tyrant referred to a ruler with no legitimate claim to rule but it did not necessarily have a negative connotation 2 3 4 Oedipus RexLouis Bouwmeester as Oedipus in a Dutch production of Oedipus Rex c 1896Written bySophoclesChorusTheban EldersCharactersOedipus Priest Creon Tiresias Jocasta Messenger Shepherd Second MessengerMuteDaughters of Oedipus Antigone and Ismene Date premieredc 429 BCPlace premieredTheatre of Dionysus AthensOriginal languageClassical GreekSeriesTheban PlaysGenreTragedySettingThebesOf Sophocles three Theban plays that have survived and that deal with the story of Oedipus Oedipus Rex was the second to be written following Antigone by about a dozen years However in terms of the chronology of events described by the plays it comes first followed by Oedipus at Colonus and then Antigone Prior to the start of Oedipus Rex Oedipus has become the king of Thebes while unwittingly fulfilling a prophecy that he would kill his father Laius the previous king and marry his mother Jocasta whom Oedipus took as his queen after solving the riddle of the Sphinx The action of Sophocles s play concerns Oedipus s search for the murderer of Laius in order to end a plague ravaging Thebes unaware that the killer he is looking for is none other than himself At the end of the play after the truth finally comes to light Jocasta hangs herself while Oedipus horrified at his patricide and incest proceeds to gouge out his own eyes in despair In his Poetics Aristotle refers several times to the play in order to exemplify aspects of the genre 5 6 Contents 1 Context 1 1 Curse upon Laius 1 2 Birth of Oedipus 1 3 Oedipus and the Oracle 1 4 Fulfilling prophecy 1 4 1 The old man 1 4 2 Riddle of the Sphinx 2 Plot 3 Relationship with mythic tradition 4 Reception 5 Themes irony and motifs 5 1 Fate free will or tragic flaw 5 2 State control 5 3 Irony 5 4 Sight and blindness 5 5 Tyranny 6 Sigmund Freud 6 1 Parsifal 7 Adaptations 7 1 Film adaptions 7 2 Stage adaptions 7 3 TV radio adaptions 7 4 Parodies 8 Editions 8 1 Translations 9 See also 10 Notes 11 Further reading 12 External linksContext editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed March 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message Curse upon Laius edit The misfortunes of Thebes are believed to be the result of a curse laid upon Laius for the time he had violated the sacred laws of hospitality Greek xenia In his youth Laius was taken in as a guest by Pelops king of Elis where he would become tutor to the king s youngest son Chrysippus in chariot racing Apollo the protector of youth and boys cursed him for raping Pelops son Chrysippus committed suicide Birth of Oedipus edit When Laius son is born he consults an oracle as to his fortune To his horror the oracle reveals that Laius is doomed to perish by the hand of his own son Laius binds the infant s feet together with a pin and orders Jocasta to kill him Unable to do so to her own son Jocasta orders a servant to expose the infant on a mountaintop The servant moved by pity gives the child to a shepherd who unbinds the infant s ankles and names him Oedipus swollen foot The shepherd brings the infant to Corinth and presents him to the childless king Polybus who raises Oedipus as his own son Oedipus and the Oracle edit As he grows to manhood Oedipus hears a rumour that he is not truly the son of Polybus and his wife Merope He asks the Delphic Oracle who his parents really are The Oracle seems to ignore this question telling him instead that he is destined to mate with his own mother and shed With his own hands the blood of his own sire Desperate to avoid this terrible fate Oedipus who still believes that Polybus and Merope are his true parents leaves Corinth for the city of Thebes Fulfilling prophecy edit The old man edit On the road to Thebes Oedipus encounters an old man and his servants The two begin to quarrel over whose chariot has the right of way While the old man moves to strike the insolent youth with his scepter Oedipus throws the man down from his chariot killing him Thus the prophecy in which Oedipus slays his own father is fulfilled as the old man as Oedipus discovers later was Laius king of Thebes and true father to Oedipus Riddle of the Sphinx edit Main article Riddle of the Sphinx nbsp Painting by Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres depicting Oedipus after he solves the riddle of the Sphinx 7 The Walters Art Museum Arriving at Thebes a city in turmoil Oedipus encounters the Sphinx a legendary beast with the head and breasts of a woman the body of a lioness and the wings of an eagle The Sphinx perched on a hill was devouring Thebans and travelers one by one if they could not solve her riddle The precise riddle asked by the Sphinx varied in early traditions and is not explicitly stated in Oedipus Rex as the event precedes the play However according to the most widely regarded version of the riddle the Sphinx asks what is the creature that walks on four legs in the morning two legs at noon and three in the evening Oedipus blessed with great intelligence answers correctly man Greek anthropos who crawls on all fours as an infant walks upright in maturity and leans on a stick in old age 8 463 Bested by the prince the Sphinx throws herself from a cliff thereby ending the curse 9 Oedipus reward for freeing Thebes from the Sphinx is kingship to the city and the hand of its dowager queen Jocasta None at that point realize that Jocasta is Oedipus true mother 10 Thus unbeknownst to either character the remaining prophecy has been fulfilled Plot editOedipus King of Thebes sends his brother in law Creon to ask the advice of the oracle at Delphi concerning a plague ravaging Thebes Creon returns to report that the plague is the result of religious pollution since the murderer of their former king Laius has never been caught Oedipus vows to find the murderer and curses him for causing the plague Oedipus summons the blind prophet Tiresias for help Tiresias admits to knowing the answers to Oedipus questions but he refuses to speak instead telling Oedipus to abandon his search Angered by the seer s reply Oedipus accuses him of complicity in Laius murder The offended Tiresias then reveals to the king that y ou yourself are the criminal you seek Oedipus does not understand how this could be and supposes that Creon must have paid Tiresias to accuse him The two argue vehemently as Oedipus mocks Tiresias lack of sight and Tiresias retorts that Oedipus himself is blind Eventually the prophet leaves muttering darkly that when the murderer is discovered he shall be a native of Thebes brother and father to his own children and son and husband to his own mother nbsp Joseph Blanc The murder of Laius by Oedipus 1867 Paris Ecole Nationale Superieure des Beaux Arts Creon arrives to face Oedipus s accusations The King demands that Creon be executed however the chorus persuades him to let Creon live Jocasta wife of first Laius and then Oedipus enters and attempts to comfort Oedipus telling him he should take no notice of prophets As proof she recounts an incident in which she and Laius received an oracle which never came true The prophecy stated that Laius would be killed by his own son instead Laius was killed by bandits at a fork in the road triplaῖs ἁma3itoῖs triplais amaxitois The mention of the place causes Oedipus to pause and ask for more details Jocasta specifies the branch to Daulis on the way to Delphi Recalling Tiresias words he asks Jocasta to describe Laius The king then sends for a shepherd the only surviving witness of the attack to be brought from his fields to the palace Confused Jocasta asks Oedipus what the matter is and he tells her Many years ago at a banquet in Corinth a man drunkenly accused Oedipus of not being his father s son Oedipus went to Delphi and asked the oracle about his parentage Instead of answering his question directly the oracle prophesied that he would one day murder his father and sleep with his mother Upon hearing this Oedipus resolved never to return to Corinth In his travels he came to the very crossroads where Laius had been killed and encountered a carriage that attempted to drive him off the road An argument ensued and Oedipus killed the travelers including a man who matched Jocasta s description of Laius However Oedipus holds out hope that he was not Laius killer because Laius was said to have been murdered by several robbers If the shepherd confirms that Laius was attacked by many men then Oedipus will be in the clear A man arrives from Corinth with the message that Polybus who raised Oedipus as his son has died To the surprise of the messenger Oedipus is overjoyed because he can no longer kill his father thus disproving half of the oracle s prophecy However he still fears that he might somehow commit incest with his mother Eager to set the king s mind at ease the messenger tells him not to worry because Merope is not his real mother The messenger explains that years earlier while tending his flock on Mount Cithaeron a shepherd from the household of Laius brought him an infant that he was instructed to dispose of The messenger had then given the child to Polybus who raised him Oedipus asks the chorus if anyone knows the identity of the other shepherd or where he might be now They respond that he is the same shepherd who witnessed the murder of Laius and whom Oedipus had already sent for Jocasta realizing the truth desperately begs Oedipus to stop asking questions When Oedipus refuses the queen runs into the palace When the shepherd arrives Oedipus questions him but he begs to be allowed to leave without answering further However Oedipus presses him finally threatening him with torture or execution It emerges that the child he gave away was Laius own son In fear of a prophecy that the child would kill his father Jocasta gave her son to the shepherd in order to be exposed upon the mountainside Everything is at last revealed and Oedipus curses himself and fate before leaving the stage The chorus laments how even a great man can be felled by fate and following this a servant exits the palace to speak of what has happened inside Jocasta has hanged herself in her bedchamber Entering the palace in anguish Oedipus called on his servants to bring him a sword that he might slay Jocasta with his own hand But upon discovering the lifeless queen Oedipus took her down and removing the long gold pins from her dress he gouged out his own eyes in despair nbsp Benigne Gagneraux The Blind Oedipus Commending his Children to the GodsThe blinded king now exits the palace and begs to be exiled Creon enters saying that Oedipus shall be taken into the house until oracles can be consulted regarding what is best to be done Oedipus s two daughters and half sisters Antigone and Ismene are sent out and Oedipus laments their having been born to such a cursed family He begs Creon to watch over them in hopes that they will live where there is opportunity for them and to have a better life than their father Creon agrees before sending Oedipus back into the palace On an empty stage the chorus repeats the common Greek maxim that no man should be considered fortunate until he is dead 11 Relationship with mythic tradition editThe two cities of Troy and Thebes were the major focus of Greek epic poetry The events surrounding the Trojan War were chronicled in the Epic Cycle of which much remains and those about Thebes in the Theban Cycle which have been lost The Theban Cycle recounted the sequence of tragedies that befell the house of Laius of which the story of Oedipus is a part Homer s Odyssey XI 271ff contains the earliest account of the Oedipus myth when Odysseus encounters Jocasta named Epicaste in the underworld Homer briefly summarises the story of Oedipus including the incest patricide and Jocasta s subsequent suicide However in the Homeric version Oedipus remains King of Thebes after the revelation and neither blinds himself nor is sent into exile In particular it is said that the gods made the matter of his paternity known whilst in Oedipus the King Oedipus very much discovers the truth himself 12 In 467 BC Sophocles s fellow tragedian Aeschylus won first prize at the City Dionysia with a trilogy about the House of Laius comprising Laius Oedipus and Seven Against Thebes the only play which survives Since he did not write connected trilogies as Aeschylus did Oedipus Rex focuses on the titular character while hinting at the larger myth obliquely which was already known to the audience in Athens at the time Reception edit nbsp P Oxy 1369 a fragmentary papyrus copy of Oedipus Rex 4th century BC The trilogy containing Oedipus Rex took second prize in the City Dionysia at its original performance Aeschylus s nephew Philocles took first prize at that competition 13 However in his Poetics Aristotle considered Oedipus Rex to be the tragedy which best matched his prescription for how drama should be made 14 Many modern critics agree with Aristotle on the quality of Oedipus Rex even if they don t always agree on the reasons For example Richard Claverhouse Jebb claimed that The Oedipus Tyrannus is in one sense the masterpiece of Attic tragedy No other shows an equal degree of art in the development of the plot and this excellence depends on the powerful and subtle drawing of the characters 15 Cedric Whitman noted that the Oedipus Rex passes almost universally for the greatest extant Greek play 16 Whitman himself regarded the play as the fullest expression of this conception of tragedy that is the conception of tragedy as a revelation of the evil lot of man where a man may have all the equipment for glory and honor but still have the greatest effort to do good end in the evil of an unbearable self for which one is not responsible 17 Edith Hall referred to Oedipus the King as this definitive tragedy and notes that the magisterial subtlety of Sophocles characterization thus lend credibility to the breathtaking coincidences and notes the irony that Oedipus can only fulfill his exceptional god ordained destiny because Oedipus is a preeminently capable and intelligent human being 18 H D F Kitto said about Oedipus Rex that it is true to say that the perfection of its form implies a world order although Kitto notes that whether or not that world order is beneficent Sophocles does not say 19 The science revolution attributed to Thales began gaining political force and this play offered a warning to the new thinkers Kitto interprets the play as Sophocles retort to the sophists by dramatizing a situation in which humans face undeserved suffering through no fault of their own but despite the apparent randomness of the events the fact that they have been prophesied by the gods implies that the events are not random despite the reasons being beyond human comprehension 20 Through the play according to Kitto Sophocles declares that it is wrong in the face of the incomprehensible and unmoral to deny the moral laws and accept chaos What is right is to recognize facts and not delude ourselves The universe is a unity if sometimes we can see neither rhyme nor reason in it we should not suppose it is random There is so much that we cannot know and cannot control that we should not think and behave as if we do know and can control 20 Oedipus Rex is widely regarded as one of the greatest plays stories and tragedies ever written 21 22 In 2015 when The Guardian s theatre critic Michael Billington selected what he thinks are the 101 greatest plays ever written Oedipus Rex was placed second just after The Persians 23 Themes irony and motifs editFate free will or tragic flaw edit nbsp A Greek amphora depicting Oedipus and the Sphinx c 450 BCFate is a motif that often occurs in Greek writing tragedies in particular Likewise where the attempt to avoid an oracle is the very thing that enables it to happen is common to many Greek myths For example similarities to Oedipus can be seen in the myth of Perseus birth Two oracles in particular dominate the plot of Oedipus Rex Jocasta relates the prophecy that was told to Laius before the birth of Oedipus lines 711 4 The oracle told him that it was his fate that he should die a victim at the hands of his own son a son to be born of Laius and me The oracle told to Laius tells only of the patricide whereas the incest is missing Prompted by Jocasta s recollection Oedipus reveals the prophecy which caused him to leave Corinth lines 791 3 that I was fated to lie with my mother and show to daylight an accursed breed which men would not endure and I was doomed to be murderer of the father that begot me The implication of Laius s oracle is ambiguous One interpretation considers that the presentation of Laius s oracle in this play differs from that found in Aeschylus s Oedipus trilogy produced in 467 BC Smith 2005 argues that Sophocles had the option of making the oracle to Laius conditional if Laius has a son that son will kill him or unconditional Laius will have a son who will kill him Both Aeschylus and Euripides write plays in which the oracle is conditional Sophocles chooses to make Laius s oracle unconditional and thus removes culpability for his sins from Oedipus for he could not have done other than what he did no matter what action he took 24 25 This interpretation is supported by Jocasta s repetition of the oracle at lines 854 55 Loxias declared that the king should be killed by his own son In Greek Jocasta uses the verb chrenai to be fated necessary This iteration of the oracle seems to suggest that it was unconditional and inevitable Other scholars have nonetheless argued that Sophocles follows tradition in making Laius s oracle conditional and thus avoidable They point to Jocasta s initial disclosure of the oracle at lines 711 14 In Greek the oracle cautions hos auton hexoi moira pros paidos thanein hostis genoit emou te kakeinou para The two verbs in boldface indicate what is called a future more vivid condition if a child is born to Laius his fate to be killed by that child will overtake him 26 Whatever the meaning of Laius s oracle the one delivered to Oedipus is clearly unconditional Given the modern conception of fate and fatalism readers of the play have a tendency to view Oedipus as a mere puppet controlled by greater forces a man crushed by the gods and fate for no good reason This however is not an entirely accurate reading While it is a mythological truism that oracles exist to be fulfilled oracles do not cause the events that lead up to the outcome In his landmark essay On Misunderstanding the Oedipus Rex 27 E R Dodds draws upon Bernard Knox s comparison with Jesus prophecy at the Last Supper that Peter would deny him three times Jesus knows that Peter will do this but readers would in no way suggest that Peter was a puppet of fate being forced to deny Christ Free will and predestination are by no means mutually exclusive and such is the case with Oedipus The oracle delivered to Oedipus is what is often called a self fulfilling prophecy whereby a prophecy itself sets in motion events that conclude with its own fulfilment 28 This however is not to say that Oedipus is a victim of fate and has no free will The oracle inspires a series of specific choices freely made by Oedipus which lead him to kill his father and marry his mother Oedipus chooses not to return to Corinth after hearing the oracle just as he chooses to head toward Thebes to kill Laius and to take Jocasta specifically as his wife In response to the plague at Thebes he chooses to send Creon to the Oracle for advice and then to follow that advice initiating the investigation into Laius murder None of these choices are predetermined nbsp Oedipus and Antigone by Charles JalabertAnother characteristic of oracles in myth is that they are almost always misunderstood by those who hear them hence Oedipus misunderstanding the significance of the Delphic Oracle He visits Delphi to find out who his real parents are and assumes that the Oracle refuses to answer that question offering instead an unrelated prophecy which forecasts patricide and incest Oedipus assumption is incorrect the Oracle does in a way answer his question On closer analysis the oracle contains essential information which Oedipus seems to neglect The wording of the Oracle I was doomed to be murderer of the father that begot me refers to Oedipus real biological father Likewise the mother with polluted children is defined as the biological one The wording of the drunken guest on the other hand you are not your father s son defines Polybus as only a foster father to Oedipus The two wordings support each other and point to the two sets of parents alternative Thus the question of two sets of parents biological and foster is raised Oedipus reaction to the Oracle is irrational he states he did not get any answer and he flees in a direction away from Corinth showing that he firmly believed at the time that Polybus and Merope are his real parents The scene with the drunken guest constitutes the end of Oedipus childhood He can no longer ignore a feeling of uncertainty about his parentage However after consulting the Oracle this uncertainty disappears strangely enough and is replaced by a totally unjustified certainty that he is the son of Merope and Polybus We have said that this irrational behaviour his hamartia as Aristotle puts it is due to the repression of a whole series of thoughts in his consciousness in fact everything that referred to his earlier doubts about his parentage 29 State control edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed September 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message The exploration of the theme of state control in Oedipus Rex is paralleled by the examination of the conflict between the individual and the state in Antigone The dilemma that Oedipus faces here is similar to that of the tyrannical Creon each man has as king made a decision that his subjects question or disobey and each king misconstrues both his own role as a sovereign and the role of the rebel When informed by the blind prophet Tiresias that religious forces are against him each king claims that the priest has been corrupted It is here however that their similarities come to an end while Creon sees the havoc he has wreaked and tries to amend his mistakes Oedipus refuses to listen to anyone The above text comes almost directly from David Grene s introduction to Sophocles I University of Chicago Press 1954 Irony edit Sophocles uses dramatic irony to present the downfall of Oedipus At the beginning of the story Oedipus is portrayed as self confident intelligent and strong willed citation needed By the end it is within these traits that he finds his demise citation needed One of the most significant instances of irony in this tragedy is when Tiresias hints to Oedipus what he has done that he has slain his own father and married his own mother lines 457 60 30 To his children he will discover that he is both brother and father To the woman who gave birth to him he is son and husband and to his father both a sharer of his bed and his murderer Go into your palace then king Oedipus and think about these things and if you find me a liar then you can truly say I know nothing of prophecies The audience knows the truth and what would be the fate of Oedipus Oedipus on the other hand chooses to deny the reality that has confronted him He ignores the word of Tiresias and continues on his journey to find the supposed killer His search for a murderer is yet another instance of irony Oedipus determined to find the one responsible for King Laius death announces to his people lines 247 53 8 466 467 I hereby call down curses on this killer that horribly as he is horrible he may drag out his wretched unblessed days This too I pray Though he be of my house if I learn of it and let him still remain may I receive the curse I have laid on others This is ironic as Oedipus is as he discovers the slayer of Laius and the curse he wishes upon the killer he has actually wished upon himself Glassberg 2017 explains that Oedipus has clearly missed the mark He is unaware that he is the one polluting agent he seeks to punish He has inadequate knowledge 31 Sight and blindness edit Literal and metaphorical references to eyesight appear throughout Oedipus Rex Clear vision serves as a metaphor for insight and knowledge yet the clear eyed Oedipus is blind to the truth about his origins and inadvertent crimes The prophet Tiresias on the other hand although literally blind sees the truth and relays what is revealed to him Only after Oedipus gouges out his own eyes physically blinding himself does he gain prophetic ability as exhibited in Oedipus at Colonus It is deliberately ironic that the seer can see better than Oedipus despite being blind Tiresias in anger expresses such lines 495 500 32 11 Since you have chosen to insult my blindness you have your eyesight and you do not see how miserable you are or where you live or who it is who shares your household Do you know the family you come from Without your knowledge you ve become the enemy of your own kindred Tyranny editOedipus switches back and forth calling Laius a tyrant lines 128 129 33 and a king lines 254 256 33 throughout the duration of the play This is done as a way to make Laius his equal in terms of ruling Laius was a legitimate king whereas Oedipus had no legitimate claim to rule Oedipus s claims of calling Laius a tyrant hint at his own insecurities of being a tyrant The tyranny brought down the way it was what troubles could keep you from looking into it For even if a god weren t forcing this on youyou shouldn t leave it festering so and thisthe case of a noble man your murdered king Sigmund Freud editSigmund Freud wrote a notable passage in Interpretation of Dreams regarding the destiny of Oedipus as well as the Oedipus complex He analyzes why this play Oedipus Rex written in Ancient Greece is so effective even to a modern audience 34 279 280 His destiny moves us only because it might have been ours because the oracle laid the same curse upon us before our birth as upon him It is the fate of all of us perhaps to direct our first sexual impulse towards our mother and our first hatred and our first murderous wish against our father Our dreams convince us that this is so Freud goes on to indicate however that the primordial urges and fears that are his concern are not found primarily in the play by Sophocles but exist in the myth the play is based on He refers to Oedipus Rex as a further modification of the legend one that originates in a misconceived secondary revision of the material which has sought to exploit it for theological purposes 34 247 35 36 Parsifal edit Main article Parsifal The Parsifal story is the reverse of the Oedipus myth cf Claude Levi Strauss 37 Adaptations editFilm adaptions edit The first English language adaption Oedipus Rex 1957 was directed by Tyrone Guthrie and starred Douglas Campbell as Oedipus In this version the entire play is performed by the cast in masks Greek prosopon as actors did in ancient Greek theatre The second English language film version Oedipus the King 1968 was directed by Philip Saville and filmed in Greece Unlike Guthrie s film this version shows the actors faces as well as boasting an all star cast including Christopher Plummer as Oedipus Lilli Palmer as Jocasta Orson Welles as Tiresias Richard Johnson as Creon Roger Livesey as the Shepherd and Donald Sutherland as the Leading Member of the Chorus Sutherland s voice however was dubbed by another actor The film went a step further than the play by actually showing in flashback the murder of Laius portrayed by Friedrich Ledebur It also shows Oedipus and Jocasta in bed together making love Though released in 1968 this film was not seen in Europe or the US until the 1970s and 1980s after legal release and distribution rights were granted to video and television In Italy Pier Paolo Pasolini directed Edipo Re 1967 a modern interpretation of the play Toshio Matsumoto s film Funeral Parade of Roses 1969 is a loose adaptation of the play and an important work of the Japanese New Wave In Colombia writer Gabriel Garcia Marquez adapted the story in Edipo Alcalde bringing it to the real world situation of Colombia at the time The Nigerian film The Gods are STILL not to Blame 2012 was produced by Funke Fayoyin premiering at Silverbird Galleria in Lagos Park Chan wook s South Korean film Oldboy 2003 was inspired by the play while making several notable changes to allow it to work in a modern South Korean setting 38 The film even alters the iconic twist causing many American critics to overlook the connection It received widespread acclaim and is seen in South Korea as the definitive adaptation citation needed Stage adaptions edit nbsp Play by the Celje Slovene People s Theatre in 1968The composer Igor Stravinsky wrote the opera oratorio Oedipus Rex which premiered in 1927 at the Theatre Sarah Bernhardt Paris It is scored for orchestra speaker soloists and male chorus The libretto based on Sophocles s tragedy was written by Jean Cocteau in French and then translated by Abbe Jean Danielou into Latin The narration however is performed in the language of the audience The work was written towards the beginning of Stravinsky s neoclassical period and is considered one of the finest works from this phase of the composer s career He had considered setting the language of the work in Ancient Greek but decided ultimately on Latin as a medium not dead but turned to stone Nigerian writer Ola Rotimi adapted Oedipus Rex into a 1968 play and novel titling it The Gods Are Not to Blame In 2012 the play was further adapted by Otun Rasheed under the title The Gods Are STILL Not to Blame Dancer and choreographer Martha Graham adapted Oedipus Rex into a short ballet entitled Night Journey premiering in 1947 In this adaptation the action focuses not on Oedipus but upon Jocasta reflecting on her strange destiny 39 40 TV radio adaptions edit Don Taylor s 1986 translation adaptation of Oedipus Rex using the English title Oedipus the King formed part of the BBC s Theban Plays trilogy It starred Michael Pennington as Oedipus with Claire Bloom as Jocasta John Gielgud as Tiresias and John Shrapnel as Creon The actors performed in modern dress In 1977 CBS Radio Mystery Theater broadcast a version of the story called So Shall Ye Reap set in 1851 in what was then the U S Territory of New Mexico In 1987 Brazilian TV Globo broadcast the soap opera Mandala a loose adaptation set in Brazil modern times starring Vera Fischer as Jocasta In 2017 BBC Radio 3 broadcast a production of Anthony Burgess translation of the play with Christopher Eccleston as Oedipus and Fiona Shaw as Tiresias Second Elder John Shrapnel who starred as Creon in the 1986 BBC television version played the First Elder Other television portrayals of Oedipus include that of Christopher Plummer 1957 Ian Holm 1972 and Patrick Stewart 1977 Parodies edit Peter Schickele parodies both the story of Oedipus Rex and the music of Stravinsky s opera oratorio of the same name in Oedipus Tex a Western themed oratorio purportedly written by P D Q Bach It was released in 1990 on the album Oedipus Tex and Other Choral Calamities Chrysanthos Mentis Bostantzoglou makes a parody of the tragedy in his comedy Medea 1993 41 In episode ten of the second season of the Australian satirical comedy show CNNNN a short animation in the style of a Disney movie trailer complete with jaunty music provided by Andrew Hansen parodies Oedipus Rex 42 Apart from being advertised as fun for the whole family the parody is also mentioned at other times during that same episode such as in a satirical advertisement in which orphans are offered a free Oedipus Rex ashes urn as a promotional offer after losing a relative 43 John Barth s novel Giles Goat Boy contains a forty page parody of the full text of Oedipus Rex called Taliped Decanus Tom Lehrer wrote and performed a comedic song based upon Oedipus Rex in 1959 Bo Burnham references Oedipus in songs Words Words Words and Rant both part of his album Words Words Words Editions editTranslations edit Thomas Francklin 1759 verse Edward H Plumptre 1865 verse full text at Wikisource rev edition of 1878 Richard C Jebb 1904 prose full text at Wikisource Sir George Young 1906 verse Gilbert Murray 1911 verse Francis Storr 1912 verse full text W B Yeats 1928 mixed prose and verse David Grene 1942 revised ed 1991 verse E F Watling 1947 verse Dudley Fitts and Robert Fitzgerald 1949 verse F L Lucas 1954 verse Theodore Howard Banks 1956 verse Albert Cook 1957 verse Bernard Knox 1959 prose H D F Kitto 1962 verse Luci Berkowitz and Theodore F Brunner 1970 prose Anthony Burgess 1972 prose and verse Stephen Berg and Diskin Clay 1978 verse Robert Bagg 1982 revised ed 2004 verse Robert Fagles 1984 The Three Theban Plays Antigone Oedipus the King Oedipus at Colonus Penguin classics ISBN 9781101042694 Don Taylor 1986 prose Nick Bartel 1999 verse abridged text Kenneth McLeish 2001 verse Ian Johnston 2004 verse full text Archived 2011 07 19 at the Wayback Machine George Theodoridis 2005 prose full text J E Thomas 2006 verse Ian C Johnston 2007 verse full text David Mulroy 2011 verse Rachel Pollack and David Vine 2011 verse Frank Nisetich 2016 verse David Kovacs 2020 verse OUP Oxford ISBN 978 0198854838 Bryan Doerries 2021 verse ISBN 0593314956 44 See also editIncest Lille Stesichorus a papyrus fragment of an alternative version by the lyric poet Stesichorus Oedipus Oedipus complex PatricideNotes edit Although Sophocles won second prize with the group of plays that included Oedipus Rex its date of production is uncertain The prominence of the Theban plague at the play s opening suggests to many scholars a reference to the plague that devastated Athens in 430 BC and hence a production date shortly thereafter See for example Knox Bernard 1956 The Date of the Oedipus Tyrannus of Sophocles American Journal of Philology 77 2 133 147 doi 10 2307 292475 JSTOR 292475 Bridgewater William ed tyrant The Columbia Encyclopedia Columbia University Press 1963 p 2188 Lloyd Jones Hugh Introduction and trans Sophocles Ajax Electra Oedipus Tyrannus By Sophocles Loeb Classical Library ser vol 20 Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0674995574 Mulroy David trans Introduction Sophocles Oedipus Rex Univ of Wisconsin Press 2011 ISBN 9780299282530 p xxviii Aristotle Poetics Edited and translated by St Halliwell Loeb Classical Library Harvard 1995 Belfiore Elizabeth 1992 Tragic Pleasures Aristotle on Plot and Emotion Princeton p 176 ISBN 9780691068992 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Oedipus and the Sphinx The Walters Art Museum Archived from the original on 2013 05 24 Retrieved 2012 09 18 a b Powell Barry B 2015 Classical Myth with translations by Herbert M Howe 8th ed Boston Pearson ISBN 978 0 321 96704 6 Ahl Frederick Two Faces of Oedipus Sophocles Oedipus Tyrannus and Seneca s Oedipus Cornell University Press 2008 page 1 ISBN 9780801473975 Johnston Ian Background Notes Vancouver Island University Archived from the original on 2020 11 06 Retrieved 2016 03 31 Herodotus in his Histories Book 1 32 attributes this maxim to Solon the Athenian statesman and lawgiver Dawe R D ed 2006 Sophocles Oedipus Rex revised edition Cambridge Cambridge University Press p 1 Smith Helaine 2005 Masterpieces of Classic Greek Drama Greenwood p 1 ISBN 978 0 313 33268 5 Thomas J E amp Osborne E 2004 Oedipus Rex Literary Touchstone Edition Prestwick House Inc p 69 ISBN 978 1 58049 593 6 Jebb R C July 2010 The Oedipus Tyrannus Read Books Design p v ISBN 978 1 4460 3178 0 Whitman C 1951 Sophocles Harvard University Press p 123 ISBN 9780674821408 Whitman C 1951 Sophocles Harvard University Press p 143 ISBN 9780674821408 Hall E 1994 Introduction Sophocles Antigone Oedipus the King Electra Oxford University Press pp xix xxii ISBN 0 19 282922 X Kitto H D F 1966 Greek Tragedy Routledge p 144 ISBN 0 415 05896 1 a b Kitto H D F 1966 Poiesis University of California Press pp 236 242 Don Nardo Greek and Roman Mythology p 205 Thomas Wolfe Arlyn Bruccoli Matthew Joseph Bruccoli O Lost A Story of the Buried Life p 460 From Oedipus to The History Boys Michael Billington s 101 greatest plays The Guardian 2 September 2015 Archived from the original on 23 July 2021 Smith Helaine 2005 Masterpieces of Classic Greek Drama Greenwood p 82 ISBN 978 0 313 33268 5 See Dodds 1966 Mastronarde 1994 19 Gregory 2005 323 Thus Sir Richard Jebb in his commentary Cf Jeffrey Rusten s 1990 commentary Greece amp Rome 2nd Ser Vol 13 No 1 Apr 1966 pp 37 49 Strictly speaking this is inaccurate Oedipus himself sets these events in motion when he decides to investigate his parentage against the advice of Polybus and Merope Brunner M King Oedipus Retried Rosenberger amp Krausz London 2001 ISBN 0 9536219 1 X Theodoridis G 2005 Oedipus Rex Oedipus Tyrannus Tyrannos King Vasileus Oidipoys Tyrannos Retrieved from Bacchicstage https bacchicstage wordpress com sophocles oedipus rex Note this source is assumed as reliable as it is provided in Powell 2015 a university course level textbook Glassbery Roy April 2017 Uses of Hamartia Flaw and Irony in Oedipus Tyrannus and King Lear Philosophy and Literature 41 1 201 206 doi 10 1353 phl 2017 0013 S2CID 171691936 Johnston Ian ed Oedipus the King Saint Louis Saint Louis Public Schools 2004 https www slps org site handlers filedownload ashx moduleinstanceid 22453 amp dataid 25126 amp FileName Sophocles Oedipus pdf a b Romm James 2017 The Greek Plays Modern Library ISBN 9780812983098 a b Freud S 2010 The Interpretation of Dreams New York Basic Books 978 0465019779 Fagles Robert Introduction Sophocles The Three Theban Plays Penguin Classics 1984 ISBN 978 0140444254 page 132 Dodds E R On Misunderstanding the Oedipus Rex The Ancient Concept of Progress Oxford Press 1973 ISBN 978 0198143772 page 70 Staude John Raphael 1976 From Depth Psychology to Depth Sociology Freud Jung and Levi Strauss Theory and Society 3 3 303 338 doi 10 1007 BF00159490 JSTOR 656968 S2CID 144353437 Retrieved 2022 06 28 Levi Strauss has noted how the Parsifal story is the reverse of the Oedipus Legend Sympathy for the Old Boy An Interview with Park Chan Wook by Choi Aryong Jowitt Deborah 1998 Graham Martha in Cohen Selma Jeanne ed The International Encyclopedia of Dance Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 acref 9780195173697 001 0001 ISBN 978 0 19 517369 7 retrieved 2021 11 11 Yaari Nurit 2003 Myth into Dance Martha Graham s Interpretation of the Classical Tradition International Journal of the Classical Tradition 10 2 221 242 doi 10 1007 s12138 003 0009 x ISSN 1073 0508 JSTOR 30221918 S2CID 161604574 Kaggelaris N 2016 Sophocles Oedipus in Mentis Bostantzoglou s Medea in Greek in Mastrapas A N Stergioulis M M eds Seminar 42 Sophocles the great classic of tragedy Athens Koralli pp 74 81 1 The Chaser Archive 2011 10 13 CNNNN Season 2 Episode 10 retrieved 2018 02 14 The Chaser Archive 2011 10 13 CNNNN Season 2 Episode 10 retrieved 2018 02 14 Sophocles Doerries 2021 Oedipus Trilogy New Versions of Oedipus the King Oedipus at Colonus Antigone Vol First Vintage books edition Vintage Further reading editBrunner M 2001 King Oedipus Retried London Rosenberger amp Krausz Cairns D L 2013 Divine and Human Action in the Oedipus Tyrannus In Tragedy and Archaic Greek Thought Edited by D L Cairns 119 171 Swansea UK Classical Press of Wales Coughanowr Effie 1997 Philosophic Meaning in Sophocles Oedipus Rex L Antiquite Classique 66 55 74 Easterling P E 1989 City Settings in Greek Poetry Proceedings of the Classical Association 86 5 17 Edmunds L 2006 Oedipus London and New York Routledge Finglass P J 2009 The Ending of Sophocles Oedipus Rex Philologus 153 42 62 Goldhill S 2009 Sophocles and the Language of Tragedy Oxford Oxford University Press Halliwell S 1986 Where Three Roads Meet A Neglected Detail in the Oedipus Tyrannus Journal of Hellenic Studies 106 187 190 Lawrence S 2008 Apollo and his Purpose in Sophocles Oedipus Tyrannus Studia Humaniora Tartuensia 9 1 18 Macintosh F 2009 Sophocles Oedipus Tyrannus Cambridge UK Cambridge Univ Press Segal C P 2001 Oedipus Tyrannus Tragic Heroism and the Limits of Knowledge 2d ed New York and Oxford Oxford University Press Sommerstein A H 2011 Sophocles and the Guilt of Oedipus Cuadernos de Filologia Clasica Estudios griegos e indoeuropeos 21 103 117 External links edit nbsp Wikisource has original text related to this article Oedipus Rex nbsp Greek Wikisource has original text related to this article Oἰdipoys Tyrannos nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Oedipus Rex nbsp Wikisource has original text related to this article Philoctetes Oedipus Tyrannus at Perseus Digital Library Aristotle s Poetics Notes on Sophocles Oedipus Archived 2018 09 30 at the Wayback Machine cached version of the original Background on Drama Generally and Applications to Sophocles Play Study Guide for Sophocles Oedipus the King Full text English translation of Oedipus the King by Ian Johnston in verse Archived 2011 07 19 at the Wayback Machine Oedipus the King Book Notes Archived 2008 09 16 at the Wayback Machine from Literapedia Oedipus the King from Project Gutenberg nbsp Oedipus Rex public domain audiobook at LibriVox Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Oedipus Rex amp oldid 1187546671, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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