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How Does Sophocles Use Irony In Oedipus The King

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When society reflects upon the history of man, that history reveals the success and failures that can lead to one’s demise. In ancient Greece, the empire stood for many years and at the peak of Greece’s dominance, Sophocles revealed the horrible truth about the collapse of their society through the creation of Oedipus. Throughout Oedipus the King, Sophocles develops characters, applies symbolism, and uses irony to capture the fatal flaws of Oedipus which produces an effective theme: if one goes against their God-given destiny, then one will ultimately fail.
Oedipus displays many key attributes that contribute to his demise: arrogance, stubbornness, and ignorance. Through Sophocles's development of the character Oedipus, Sophocles uses Oedipus …show more content…

The main symbolism that Sophocles utilizes is the “blindness” of Oedipus and how this blindness persisted throughout the story rather than exclusively at the ending of the play. Later in the play, Oedipus converses with Tiresias and Tiresias says, “Hear this, since you have thrown my blindness at me: Your eyes can’t see the evil to which you’ve come, nor where you live, nor who is in your house” (1665). The exchange between these two characters reveals to the audience that Oedipus has a figurative flaw that has contributed to his failures as a king. In Segal’s analysis, he believes that the blindness represents “the hard acquisition of his human experience and suffering[, and] discerns, not the future, like the old prophet, but the meaning of his past and the reality of his own condition of strength-in-weakness in the present” (425). The blindness of Oedipus symbolizes and justifies the actions that Oedipus took throughout the story. After realizing his fate, Oedipus decides to blind himself and as he enters the stage, the Choragos states “terrifying suffering for men to see, more terrifying than any ever” (Sophocles. Exodus. 1305-1307). The symbolism of blindness allows the audience to tie together the many flaws of Oedipus, and at the end of the play, the blindness links the failures together and contributes to the theme. The symbolic views of Oedipus eventually became clouded, and the inability …show more content…

In the play, Oedipus misses warning signs about his future, yet the audience can begin to predict the outcome after Oedipus’s conversation with Jocasta. Jocasta tells Oedipus about the murder of Laius and Oedipus responds by saying “oh, Zeus, what have you willed to do to me?” and proceeds to ask many questions about the physical appearance of Laius. At this point, the audience and Oedipus begin to realize the truth about his future and past, yet the other characters remain confused about the situation. This irony emphasizes Oedipus’s failure for no character expected this

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