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FREE ESSAY ON OEDIPUS - THE TRAGIC HERO

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Oedipus and Hamlet: Tragic Heroes
This paper discusses the features of the tragic hero, comparing and contrasting between is Sophocles’ "Oedipus Rex" and Shakespeare's "Hamlet". -- 1,325 words; MLA

The Tragic Greek Hero
This paper discusses the tragic hero in Greek mythology by comparing Sophocles' character Oedipus with other Greek heroes---Hercules, Odysseus and Achilles. -- 1,015 words; APA

Tragic Heroes
Compares Sophocles's Oedipus and Arthur Miller's Willy Loman, using Aristotle's definition of a tragic hero. -- 1,539 words;

The Tragic Hero in Modern Literature
A discussion of tragic heroes in modern, American literature. -- 9,500 words; MLA

The Tragic Greek Hero
A look at the use of complexity by Greek tragedians to create a tragic hero. -- 1,955 words; MLA

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OEDIPUS - THE TRAGIC HERO

In the play Oedipus Rex by Sophocles, Oedipus is a classic tragic hero. According to
Aristotle's definition, Oedipus is a tragic hero because he is a king whose life falls
apart when he finds out his life story. There are a number of characteristics described
by Aristotle that identify a tragic hero. For example, a tragic hero must cause his own
downfall; his fate is not deserved, and his punishment exceeds the crime; he also must be
of noble stature and have greatness. Oedipus is in love with his idealized self, but
neither the grandiose nor the depressive Narcissus can really love himself (Miller 67).
All of the above characteristics make Oedipus a tragic hero according to Aristotle's
ideas about tragedy, and a narcissist. 
Using Oedipus as an ideal model, Aristotle says that a tragic hero must be an important
or influential man who makes an error in judgment, and who must then suffer the
consequences of his actions. Those actions are seen when Oedipus forces Teiresias to
reveal his destiny and his father's name. When Teiresias tries to warn him by saying  I
say that you and your most dearly loved are wrapped together in a hideous sin, blind to
the horror of it (Sophocles 428). Oedipus still does not care and proceeds with his
questioning as if he did not understand what Teiresias was talking about. 
The tragic hero must learn a lesson from his errors in judgment and become an example to
the audience of what happens when great men fall from their lofty social or political
positions. According to Miller, a person who is great, who is admired everywhere, and
needs this admiration to survive, has one of the extreme forms of narcissism, which is
grandiosity. Grandiosity can be seen when a person admires himself, his qualities, such
as beauty, cleverness, and talents, and his success and achievements greatly. If one of
these happens to fail, then the catastrophe of a severe depression is near (Miller 34).
Those actions happen when the Herdsman tells Oedipus who his mother is, and Oedipus
replies Oh, oh, then everything has come out true. Light, I shall not look on you Again.
I have been born where I should not be born, I have been married where I should not
marry, I have killed whom I should not kill; now all is clear (Sophocles 1144). 
Oedipus's decision to pursue his questioning is wrong; his grandiosity blinded him and,
therefore, his fate is not deserved, but it is far beyond his control. A prophecy is
foretold to Laius, the father of Oedipus, that the destiny of Oedipus is a terrible one
beyond his control. But when it is prophesized to Oedipus, he sets forth from the city of
his foster parents in order to prevent this terrible fate from occurring. Oedipus's
destiny is not deserved because he is being punished for his parent's actions. His birth
parents seek the advice of the Delphi Oracle, who recommends that they should not have
any children. When the boy is born, Laius is overcome with terror when he remembers the
oracle. Oedipus is abandoned by his birth parents and is denied their love, which is what
results in what Miller calls Depression as Denial of the Self. Depression results from a
denial of one's own emotional reactions, and we cannot really love if we deny our truth,
the truth about our parents and caregivers as, well as about ourselves (Miller 43). 
The birth of Oedipus presets his destiny to result in tragedy even though he is of noble
birth. In tragedies, protagonists are usually of the nobility that makes their falls seem
greater. Oedipus just happens to be born a prince, and he has saved a kingdom that is
rightfully his from the Sphinx. His destiny is to be of noble stature from birth, which
is denied to him by his parents, but given back by the Sphinx. His nobility deceived him
as well as his reflection, since it shows only his perfect, wonderful face and not his
inner world, his pain, his history (Miller 66). When he relies on his status, he is
blind, not physically, but emotionally. He is blind in his actions; therefore he does not
see that the questioning would bring him only misery. Later, after his self- inflicted
blinding, Oedipus sees his actions as wrongdoing when he says What use are my eyes to me,
who could never - See anything pleasant again? (Sophocles 1293) and that blindness does
not necessarily have to be physical as we can se when he says, If I had sight, I know not
with what eyes I would have looked (Sophocles 1325). 
In the play Oedipus Rex, Sophocles portrays the main character, Oedipus, as a good-
natured person who has bad judgment and is frail. Oedipus makes a few fatal decisions and
is condemned to profound suffering because of them. Agreeing with Aristotle that Oedipus'
misfortune happens because of his tragic flaw. If he hadn't been so judgmental or
narcissistic, as Miller would characterize a personality like Oedipus, he would never
have killed King Laius and called Teiresias a liar. In the beginning, Teiresias is simply
trying to ease him slowly into the truth; but Oedipus is too proud to see any truths, and
he refuses to believe that he could have been responsible for such a horrible crime. He
learns a lesson about life and how there is more to it than just one person's fate.

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