Thursday, May 30, 2019
Free Essays: Oedipus Rex and Antigone :: comparison compare contrast essays
Oedipus Rex and Antigone There is no curse on the house of Oedipus. Because of the many terrible things that happen to the members of Oedipuss family, a reader might be led to take that there is such a curse. However, if that person examines the stories of Oedipus Rex and Antigone more closely, he or she will find that the reason so many tragedies happened to Oedipuss family is non because of some curse, hardly rather because of one common thread. Each person in the line of Oedipus tries to balk assurance in one way or another. Oedipus and Jocasta both decline the authority of the gods by trying to run away from a prophesy of theirs, which results in Jocastas death and Oedipuss dethroning and downfall. Antigone defies the authority of the king by violating his edict, which results in her death. In Ismenes case, the authority that is defied is that of the moral law, and for that she has to live out her days with guilt and regret. The authority which Oedipus and Jocasta defy is the same. Both the king and his mother defy the authority of the gods by trying to border their edict. The edict states that a son would be born to Jocasta who would marry his mother and kill his father, as Oedipus says, How mating with my mother I must spawn a progeny...having been my fathers murderer. (OEDIPUS, Oedipus, 44). When Jocasta hears of this, she attempts to kill the baby Oedipus, thus trying to escape the prophesy. Similarly, when Oedipus, as an unmarried adult, hears that he would kill his father, he runs away from his home town, Corinth, never to return. Oedipus and Jocasta both defy the gods authority, which in this case comes in the form of running away from a menacing prophesy. In the end, however, Jocasta dies and Oedipus is overthrown and ruined. Like her parents, Antigone defies a powerful authority. Unlike her parents though, that authority is not of the gods, but rather of a person who thinks he is a god Creon, Antigones uncle, great-uncle, and king. He proc laims that the body of Polyneices, Antigones brother who fought against Thebes in war, would be left to rot unburied on the field, He must be left unwept, unsepulchered, a vultures prize.... (ANTIGONE, Antigone, 192). Antigone, enraged by the injustice done to her family, defies Creons direct order and buries her brother.
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