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Theme Of Dramatic Irony In Oedipus

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Sophocles uses irony in his writing to prove only fate controls one's life and not free will. The dramatic irony asserting the reader that the prophecy had indeed come true before Oedipus even knows it further proves that fate controls the lives of mortals. Teiresias uses irony to proclaim to Oedipus “that with those you love best you live in foulest shame unconsciously and do not see where you are in calamity (633).Teiresias used dramatic irony by telling Oedipus how his life contains a path of shame yet he does not believe him. Every time that Oedipus does not believe another person who tells him of the shame that approaches in the near future the reader becomes more aware of the situation and the dramatic irony becomes more and …show more content…

However, the irony is quite evident when the prophecy itself had come true it was simply unclear to Jocasta and Oedipus at the time. Try and Try as one might they will never be able to alter a prophecy for they never controlled their own free will. The irony included that they believed that it worked that they were free but no one may truly free themselves from fate. The Literary element, Irony, suggests fate as the overpowering force in Oedipus and does so by proving one may never alter a prophecy and immortals control all mortals.
Sophocles used Character development methods in his writing to prove only fate controls one's life and not free will. Oedipus first revealed to the reader as a self-absorbed arrogant man who has received more credit than deserved, simply for beating the sphinx. Sophocles gives the reader this impression of Oedipus by Oedipus describing himself as “ Oedipus whom all men call the Great” (621). Oedipus claiming that all men call him the great proves that Oedipus acquired a self-absorbed mentality when the reader reads on realizing that not one character throughout the story calls him “The Great” beside himself. Oedipus did not choose to be

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