The Greek drama Oedipus Rex is clearly a
tragedy. It definitely meets the five
main criteria for
a tragedy: a tragic hero of noble birth, a tragic flaw, a fall from grace, a
moment of
remorse, and catharsis.
Oedipus Rex clearly meets the first of these
five criteria. Oedipus is the son of
Laius, who was
king of Thebes. Even at the beginning of the story, when we are told that
Oedipus is the
son of Polybus, he is still of noble birth; Polybus is king of Corinth.
The tragic flaw, or mistake that a character
makes, in Oedipus Rex does not
actually take
place during the story. We only watch as Oedipus and the rest of the
characters
discover this mistake that was actually made long, long ago and cannot be
reversed. This
tragic flaw is of course Oedipus killing his father Lauis, and then marrying
Jocasta, his
mother. We realize that these actions have taken place much earlier in the
story than the
characters do. However, both of these events actually took many years ago.
The fall from grace in Oedipus Rex is when
Oedipus, Jocasta, and all the other
characters in the
story realize that Oedipus actually did murder Laius and that Jocasta is
indeed his mother
as well as his wife. This occurs rather quickly, very close to the end of
the play.
The audience sees this coming long before it
actually does, however. In one of the
passages of
Oedipus speaking with Jocasta, just about everything is spelled out for us.
Jocasta speaks of
Laius leaving the castle with just a few servants and his being killed
where three roads
meet. Oedipus claims that he killed somebody where three roads met,
who had a few
servants with him. As though this isn't enough, Jocasta describes Laius to
Oedipus by saying
"his figure was not much unlike your own" (p. 27). Oedipus, after
hearing all this,
says "O, it is plain already!" (p. 27) indicating that he was the
killer of his
father. He goes
on to make absolutely sure, even though it is obvious that he was Lauis's
killer.
The moment of remorse comes at the end of
the story, when one of the servants
who had
accompanied Laius on his final journey came to speak to Oedipus. He was the
only one who
survived the attack, and told that contrary to rumor, Laius was killed by
one man, not
robbers. He then pointed out this one man, Oedipus. We are told soon after
that Jocasta
hanged herself upon hearing this. When this news reaches Oedipus, he takes
the pins from her
dress and stabs his eyes out.
The catharsis, or emotional cleansing of the
audience, comes at the same time as
the remorse. The
audience suddenly feels sorry for this poor man who has unknowingly
killed his father
and married his mother, for the people of this land who have been
suffering from an
awful curse because of it, and for the unfortunate Jocasta, who was
basically an
innocent bystander in the whole confusing disaster.
In these five ways, the story Oedipus Rex
classifies as a tragedy. However, in my
opinion at least,
you don't really need a standard checklist to see if Oedipus Rex is a
tragedy or not.
Any story which ends in the death of one major character and a lifetime of
misery, shame,
and self-exile for the other major character is clearly a tragedy.
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