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Use Of Dramatic Irony In Sophocles Oedipus The King

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Like with all tragic dramas, the play Oedipus the King by Sophocles, used dramatic irony in order to convey his tragic flaw of pride and arrogance. This tragic flaw is also key in highlighting Oedipus’ lack of identity as well as showing the role that fate had to play in tragic life. Through his ironic actions, the readers are subjected to dramatic irony in which Oedipus does not know what he is saying, but the reader knowing the plot of the play, allows them to see the irony in their words. As the play progresses, these instances of dramatic irony are key in showing his tragic flaw of pride. From claiming that Tiresias was a fool and a fraud, to accusing Creon and Tiresias for plotting to usurp his throne, or claiming that he was the giver of good luck just when he was on the cusp of finding out the terrible things he had done; these instances of dramatic irony are key in pointing out Oedipus’ tragic flaw of pride.
The revealing of Oedipus’ tragic flaw begins as Oedipus ridicules the blind prophet, Tiresias, for the accusatory fortunes that had revealed to his fate. As a flustered and defensive Oedipus derided Tiresias of his apparent lack of foreseeing fate and the prophecies of Apollo, he uttered, “You are blind, your ears and mind as well as eyes”(23). This is an instance of dramatic irony as the audience knows that Oedipus is the one that is blind in a figurative sense as he was the one that could not see his own fate/identity, while Oedipus does not. This event was right after Tiresias had told him that the man that plagued Thebes was Oedipus himself and instead of thinking about what he had said and connecting the dots about his past, Oedipus set about mocking and deriding the seer, calling him blind in the mind and ears along with the blindness in his eyes. This clearly illustrates Oedipus’ pride as he chose to ignore what the seer had to say, believing that he could never be the man that defiled Thebes seeing as he was its king and its saviour. He clearly thought of himself to be above such things and so he instead derided Tiresias, going onto later accuse him of plotting with Creon to usurp his throne. Another instance of dramatic irony can be seen when Oedipus proclaimed, “I shall make a

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