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Oedipus Tragic Hero Essay

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There are certain elements present in tragic stories that qualify them to be identified as tragic. Because tragedy as a genre was not an inexorable matter, authors have been able to take it into their own hands, diverting from the traditional styles as they desire. Among the traditional elements of the genre is the inclusion of a tragic hero who finds defeat through his fatal flaw. While still confining to certain attributes of tragedy, these remodeled stories portray tragic heroes in an especially unique way. Two such tragic tales that modify the idea of a tragic hero are Sophocles’ Oedipus Rex and Euripides’ Medea. The characters Oedipus from Oedipus Rex and Medea from Medea alter the perception of tragic heroes evident in their many differences and few shared tragic hero qualities. Oedipus and Medea are tragic heroes in their own tragic tale. However, they share only a few attributes. The most apparent similarity is the two character's’ tragic flaw. A tragic flaw in Greek tragedies is a quality in a character, usually defined as an error in judgement, that brings about their demise. For both Medea and Oedipus, this was excessive …show more content…

Oedipus understood justice as punishing and rewarding people adequately for the magnitude of their actions. For example, Oedipus promised a lesser punishment to the man who killed Laius if the man turned himself in: “If any man’s conscience is guilty, let him give himself up. He will suffer the less” (Sophocles, 227-228). Medea’s perception of justice was self-justice, as she said, “there is no justice in the world’s judgmental eyes” (Eupholus, 221). She felt the world was insufficient to provide justice, so she had to take it into her own hand. She rebelled against the justice system about the treatment of women in a society ruled by men. She was wronged by Jason, and she felt justified to wrong him in a way that he truly would feel her pain: by killing everyone he

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