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The power to change feelings Essay

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C.J. Hassan
Mr. Woodbury
English H/P. 5
4/19/13
Tragedy: The Power to Change Feelings

“Tragedy” is a term that although complex was given definition by Aristotle in his Poetics. In drama, specifically, “. . . a tragedy is a play, in verse or prose, that recounts an important and casually related series of events in the life of a person of significance, such events culminating in an unhappy catastrophe, the whole treated with great dignity and seriousness” (Handbook 505). Sophocles’ play Oedipus Rex serves as the best example of this genre with its defining components aimed to arouse both pity and fear in the audience. According to Aristotle, “. . . [P]lot is the soul of a tragedy. Such a plot must involve a protagonist who is …show more content…

There is a scene when Oedipus goes on an outbreak at both Tiresias and Creon. Tiresias, speaking to Oedipus, predicts that Oedipus will soon figure out in the near future that he is the one who killed his own father. Tiresias replies, “Do you know your true descent? And secretly/ you are an enemy to you own kin….” (25: 432-433). In response to this, Oedipus gets very angry and says to Tiresias, “Am I to tolerate hearing this from this man?/ No, to hell with him! No! Turn around quickly/ and head back home, far away from here” (25: 448-450). During this exact scene, readers are first introduced to how Oedipus reacts immaturely to emotional topics. Apart from Oedipus’s raging events, he also, brings up his story of meeting a stranger at the crossroads. In this story, Oedipus became furious because a drunken man called him a fraud in which he meant for his father. As the readers know how sensitive Oedipus can be to topics dealing with his father, Oedipus explains how furious he was and could not hold it in. A few days later, traveling near a very triple road, Oedipus sees a chariot and hits the driver out of anger. Another man in the chariot strikes Oedipus on the head with a two-pronged goad and in return, Oedipus kills the old man by the scepter from his very own hand. This event displays Oedipus’s

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