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Welcome to today’s class Presented by Md. Munibur Rahman Assistant Professor Department of English Jessore Govt City

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Page 1: Welcome to today’s class Presented by Md. Munibur Rahman Assistant Professor Department of English Jessore Govt City College, Jessore

Welcome to today’s classPresented by

Md. Munibur Rahman

Assistant Professor

Department of English

Jessore Govt City College, Jessore

Page 2: Welcome to today’s class Presented by Md. Munibur Rahman Assistant Professor Department of English Jessore Govt City College, Jessore

King Oedipus

Sophocles (496 – 406 BC)

Page 3: Welcome to today’s class Presented by Md. Munibur Rahman Assistant Professor Department of English Jessore Govt City College, Jessore

King OedipusThe cover of the drama shows “Oedipus and the Sphinx” from a cup in the Etruscan Museum, the Vatican (Photo: Scala)

Page 4: Welcome to today’s class Presented by Md. Munibur Rahman Assistant Professor Department of English Jessore Govt City College, Jessore

Sophocles’ Oedipus Rex • Probably it’s the most famous tragedy ever

written. • It is known by a variety of titles (the most

common being Oedipus Rex), including Oedipus the King and Oedipus Tyrannus.

• Sophocles first produced the play in Athens around 430 B.C. at the Great Dionysia, a religious and cultural festival held in honor of the god Dionysus, where it won second prize. Dionysus is the god of wine and fertility and drama; the Greek name of Bacchus.

Page 5: Welcome to today’s class Presented by Md. Munibur Rahman Assistant Professor Department of English Jessore Govt City College, Jessore

Translation of Oedipus Rex (1)

• Thomas Francklin, 1759 – verse • Edward H. Plumptre, 1865 – verse: full text • Richard C. Jebb, 1904 – prose: full text • Gilbert Murray, 1911 – verse • Francis Storr, 1912 – verse: full text • William Butler Yeats, 1928 – mixed prose and verse • David Grene, 1942 (revised ed. 1991) – verse • E.F. Watling, 1947 – verse • Dudley Fitts and Robert Fitzgerald, 1949 – verse

Page 6: Welcome to today’s class Presented by Md. Munibur Rahman Assistant Professor Department of English Jessore Govt City College, Jessore

Translation of Oedipus Rex (2)• Theodore Howard Banks, 1956 – verse • Albert Cook, 1957 – verse • Bernard Knox, 1959 – prose • H. D. F. Kitto, 1962 – verse • Stephen Berg and Diskin Clay – verse • Robert Bagg, 1982 (revised ed. 2004) – verse • Robert Fagles, 1984 – verse • Nick Bartel, 1999 – verse: abridged text • Kenneth McLeish, 2001 - Verse • George Theodoridis, 2005 – prose: full text • Luci Berkowitz and Theodore F. Brunner, 1970 – prose • Ian Johnston, 2004 – verse: full text

Page 7: Welcome to today’s class Presented by Md. Munibur Rahman Assistant Professor Department of English Jessore Govt City College, Jessore

Ancient Greek Tragedy• video:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kmSbqfy5Df0&feature=related

Sophocles Aristotle

Page 8: Welcome to today’s class Presented by Md. Munibur Rahman Assistant Professor Department of English Jessore Govt City College, Jessore

Ancient Greek Theatre.flv • Video:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vNAM3PzGcow&feature=related

Page 9: Welcome to today’s class Presented by Md. Munibur Rahman Assistant Professor Department of English Jessore Govt City College, Jessore

Three Theban plays: Not a trilogy• Oedipus the King Oedipus at Colonus

Antigone.• Antigone was first performed in 442 BCE.• Oedipus the King was first performed c. 429

BCE.• Oedipus at Colonus was written shortly before

Sophocles' death in 406 BC and produced by his grandson (also called Sophocles) at the Festival of Dionysus in 401 BCE.

Page 10: Welcome to today’s class Presented by Md. Munibur Rahman Assistant Professor Department of English Jessore Govt City College, Jessore

People and places to know:

• Oedipus• Jocasta• Laius• Polybus• Merope

• Sphinx• Teiresias (Tiresias )• Apollo• Delphi• Cithaeron• Thebes (the House of Cadamus)

Page 11: Welcome to today’s class Presented by Md. Munibur Rahman Assistant Professor Department of English Jessore Govt City College, Jessore
Page 12: Welcome to today’s class Presented by Md. Munibur Rahman Assistant Professor Department of English Jessore Govt City College, Jessore

The picture shows Oedipus explaining the riddle of the Sphinx.

Painted by: Jean Auguste

Page 13: Welcome to today’s class Presented by Md. Munibur Rahman Assistant Professor Department of English Jessore Govt City College, Jessore
Page 14: Welcome to today’s class Presented by Md. Munibur Rahman Assistant Professor Department of English Jessore Govt City College, Jessore

Sphinxa winged female monster in Greek mythology having a woman's head and a lion's body

and noted for killing anyone

unable to answer its riddle

Page 15: Welcome to today’s class Presented by Md. Munibur Rahman Assistant Professor Department of English Jessore Govt City College, Jessore

an ancient Egyptian image in the form of a recumbent lion having a man's head, a ram's head, or a hawk's head

Sphinx

Page 16: Welcome to today’s class Presented by Md. Munibur Rahman Assistant Professor Department of English Jessore Govt City College, Jessore

Apollo

Apollo has been variously recognized as a god of light and the sun, truth and prophecy, healing, plague, music, poetry, and more. Apollo is the son of Zeus and Leto, and has a twin sister, the chaste huntress Artemis. Apollo is known in Greek-influenced Etruscan mythology as Apulu. Some of his epithets: Phoebus, Delian (as born in Delos island), Pythian, Lycian, etc.

Page 17: Welcome to today’s class Presented by Md. Munibur Rahman Assistant Professor Department of English Jessore Govt City College, Jessore

Oracle: A prophecy (usually obscure or allegorical) revealed by a priest or priestess; believed to be infallible.

Pythia: (Greek mythology) the priestess of Apollo at Delphi who transmitted the oracles

Page 18: Welcome to today’s class Presented by Md. Munibur Rahman Assistant Professor Department of English Jessore Govt City College, Jessore

Cithaeron / KithaironIt is a mountain range about 10 mi long, in central Greece, standing between Boeotia in the north and Attica in the south. It is mainly composed of limestone and rises to 4,623 ft. Its northeast side is formed by the mountain Pastra

Page 19: Welcome to today’s class Presented by Md. Munibur Rahman Assistant Professor Department of English Jessore Govt City College, Jessore

Cithaeron / KithaironIt is a mountain range about 10 mi long, in central Greece, standing between Boeotia in the north and Attica in the south. It is mainly composed of limestone and rises to 4,623 ft. Its northeast side is formed by the mountain Pastra.

Page 20: Welcome to today’s class Presented by Md. Munibur Rahman Assistant Professor Department of English Jessore Govt City College, Jessore

Cithaeron / KithaironIt is a mountain range about 10 mi long, in central Greece, standing between Boeotia in the north and Attica in the south. It is mainly composed of limestone and rises to 4,623 ft. Its northeast side is formed by the mountain Pastra

Page 21: Welcome to today’s class Presented by Md. Munibur Rahman Assistant Professor Department of English Jessore Govt City College, Jessore

DelphiThe Pythia was the priestess at the Temple of Apollo at Delphi, located on the slopes of Mount Parnassus.

Page 22: Welcome to today’s class Presented by Md. Munibur Rahman Assistant Professor Department of English Jessore Govt City College, Jessore

Teiresias (Tiresias ) A famous prophet of Thebes. He accidentally came across Athena while she was bathing, so she blinded him. At his mother’s pleading, Athena gave Teiresias the gift of prophecy to compensate for his blindness. He died after drinking the water from the spring Tilphussa, where he was struck by an arrow of Apollo.

Page 23: Welcome to today’s class Presented by Md. Munibur Rahman Assistant Professor Department of English Jessore Govt City College, Jessore

Major gods and goddesses

Greek Name Roman Name god/goddess of

Aphrodite Venus Love (goddess)

Apollo Apollo light, sun, prophecy, healing, music, poetry, etc. (god)

Artemis Diana chastity, hunting, and wild animals (goddess)

Athene/Athena

Minerva war, wisdom and crafts (goddess)

Eros Cupid love (god)

Hades Pluto Underworld (god)

Hera Juno Protector of women and marriage

Zeus Jupiter King of all gods and goddess of Olympus

Page 24: Welcome to today’s class Presented by Md. Munibur Rahman Assistant Professor Department of English Jessore Govt City College, Jessore
Page 26: Welcome to today’s class Presented by Md. Munibur Rahman Assistant Professor Department of English Jessore Govt City College, Jessore

The structure of Greek Tragedy

• Prologue, 1-150• Parodos, 151-215• First Episode, 216-462 • First Stasimon, 463-512 • Second Episode, 513-862 • Second Stasimon, 863-910

• Third Episode, 911-1085 • Third Stasimon, 1086-

1109 • Fourth Episode, 1110-1185 • Fourth Stasimon, 1186-

1222 • Exodos, 1223-1530

Page 27: Welcome to today’s class Presented by Md. Munibur Rahman Assistant Professor Department of English Jessore Govt City College, Jessore

Prologue: An introduction to a playStasimon: (στάσιμον) is a stationary/standing song, composed of strophes and antistrophes and performed by the chorus in the orchestra. Ancient tragedy began as a conversation between a single actor and a chorus. A second and third actor were added -- eventually.

Page 28: Welcome to today’s class Presented by Md. Munibur Rahman Assistant Professor Department of English Jessore Govt City College, Jessore

Strophe & AntistropheAntistrophe (a turning back) is the portion of an ode sung by the chorus in its returning movement from west to east, in response to the strophe, which was sung from east to west.

Page 29: Welcome to today’s class Presented by Md. Munibur Rahman Assistant Professor Department of English Jessore Govt City College, Jessore

Peripeteia/Peripety

/ˌpɛrəpɨˈtaɪə/ (Greek: περιπέτεια) A sudden turn of circumstances or an unexpected reversal/turning point. The English form of peripeteia is peripety.

Page 30: Welcome to today’s class Presented by Md. Munibur Rahman Assistant Professor Department of English Jessore Govt City College, Jessore

Anagnorisis

/ˌænəɡˈnɒrɨsɨs/; (Greek: ἀναγνώρισις):It is a moment in a play or other work when a character makes a critical discovery. Anagnorisis originally meant recognition in its Greek context, not only of a person but also of what that person stood for. Anagnorisis was the hero's sudden awareness of a real situation, the realisation of things as they stood, and finally, the hero's insight into a relationship with an often antagonistic character in Aristotelian tragedy.

Page 31: Welcome to today’s class Presented by Md. Munibur Rahman Assistant Professor Department of English Jessore Govt City College, Jessore
Page 32: Welcome to today’s class Presented by Md. Munibur Rahman Assistant Professor Department of English Jessore Govt City College, Jessore

Introduction

• The setting of the Oedipus the King as in the case of most Greek tragedies, does not require a change of scene. Throughout the play the scene with at least one door represents the façade (face or front of a building) of the royal palace of Thebes.

• http://ablemedia.com/ctcweb/netshots/oedipus.htm

Page 33: Welcome to today’s class Presented by Md. Munibur Rahman Assistant Professor Department of English Jessore Govt City College, Jessore

Prologue (1-150) - Oedipus, Priest and Creon

Read (1)

Page 34: Welcome to today’s class Presented by Md. Munibur Rahman Assistant Professor Department of English Jessore Govt City College, Jessore

Prologue, 1-150. (Priest, Oedipus, Creon)

• The priests of Thebes appear before Oedipus as suppliants, entreating him to find some end to the plague.

• Oedipus has already sent Creon to Delphi, who arrives to report that the killer of Laius must be sought out and banished.

• Oedipus vows to find the killer and summons the people of the city.

Page 35: Welcome to today’s class Presented by Md. Munibur Rahman Assistant Professor Department of English Jessore Govt City College, Jessore

Prologue (1-150) - Oedipus, Priest and Creon

• What is the dramatic purpose of the prologue?

• How does Oedipus characterize himself (8)?

• What is his attitude toward the suppliants (13-14)?

Page 36: Welcome to today’s class Presented by Md. Munibur Rahman Assistant Professor Department of English Jessore Govt City College, Jessore

Pollution/ miasma

• blood pollution that infects the family, and for a royal family the city itself

• The Plague of Thebes, oil on canvas,

Charles François Jalabeat (French, 1819-1901)

Page 37: Welcome to today’s class Presented by Md. Munibur Rahman Assistant Professor Department of English Jessore Govt City College, Jessore

Oedipus

• "Oidi-pous“ in Greek means "swollen footed”• But we can also analyze Oedipus in at least

two other ways: – oidi- to a Greek sounds like oida, oide = "I know,

he knows" (a central theme in the play) – -dipous to a Greek means the "two-footed one,"

with obvious associations to the riddle of the Sphinx (another central theme)

Page 38: Welcome to today’s class Presented by Md. Munibur Rahman Assistant Professor Department of English Jessore Govt City College, Jessore

Oedipus• Man of action, caring but haughty: 7ff, 71ff

etc. • Revealer of the truth: 150 • Solver of riddles: 443ff (e.g.)

Page 39: Welcome to today’s class Presented by Md. Munibur Rahman Assistant Professor Department of English Jessore Govt City College, Jessore

Parodos , 151-215.

• The Chorus of Theban citizens offer prayers to Zeus, Apollo, Athena for release from the plague.

Parodos:

Page 40: Welcome to today’s class Presented by Md. Munibur Rahman Assistant Professor Department of English Jessore Govt City College, Jessore

Parados (151-215)

• What is the reaction of the Chorus to the advice of Apollo ('the Delian Healer') to Thebes (154-157)?

• What conditions in Thebes does the Chorus describe (170-182)?

• Video:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2wcqRm_loB0&feature=related

Page 42: Welcome to today’s class Presented by Md. Munibur Rahman Assistant Professor Department of English Jessore Govt City College, Jessore

chorus is an "act-dividing song":

–allows for entrances and exits –allows for the scene to change –marks the passage of time–chorus comments directly or indirectly

on what is going on

Page 43: Welcome to today’s class Presented by Md. Munibur Rahman Assistant Professor Department of English Jessore Govt City College, Jessore

First Episode , 216-462.

Read (2): p.6, p.7-11

Page 44: Welcome to today’s class Presented by Md. Munibur Rahman Assistant Professor Department of English Jessore Govt City College, Jessore

First Episode , 216-462.

• A group of Theban people lead urges Oedipus to save them from the plague in the country.

• Oedipus appeals for information and pronounces his curse on the murderer.

• Teiresias is summoned: at first he refuses to tell what he knows, but aroused by Oedipus' taunts he declares Oedipus the murderer.

• Oedipus declares a conspiracy by Creon. Teiresias declares that the murderer is present, and will be found son and husband to his mother.

Page 45: Welcome to today’s class Presented by Md. Munibur Rahman Assistant Professor Department of English Jessore Govt City College, Jessore

First Episode (216-462) - Oedipus, Chorus and Teiresias

• Explain the following ironies in Oedipus's speech (218-220; 236-248; 249-251; 259-265).

• Why does Oedipus summon Teiresias (278-287)? What is Teiresias's reaction to Oedipus's request for help (316-344)?

Page 46: Welcome to today’s class Presented by Md. Munibur Rahman Assistant Professor Department of English Jessore Govt City College, Jessore

I must know. Know thyself!

• But knowing is itself problematized in the Oedipus the King: central to the text is not only what is known and by whom, but what it means to "know"-- what is "true" knowing.

• Insight and blindness

Page 47: Welcome to today’s class Presented by Md. Munibur Rahman Assistant Professor Department of English Jessore Govt City College, Jessore

Apollo versus Oedipus: • divine versus human knowledge• Apollo

– sun, day, clear, blazing, burning – fever, blazing, burning: sender of plague and

the Healer – intelligence, clear, seeing – brilliance, poetry – truth (knowledge), clear, seeing – divine prophecy, clear, seeing

Page 48: Welcome to today’s class Presented by Md. Munibur Rahman Assistant Professor Department of English Jessore Govt City College, Jessore

Prophet/ Tiresias

• Teiresias, the seer of Oedipus the King: Sophocles’ and Seneca’s versions http://www.leeds.ac.uk/classics/lics/2003/200305.pdf

• South Italian Red-figure bowl. Detail: Tiresias seated holding sacrificial knife as Odysseus (left) stands by him

Page 49: Welcome to today’s class Presented by Md. Munibur Rahman Assistant Professor Department of English Jessore Govt City College, Jessore

First Stasimon (463-512)

• What is the Chorus's view of Teiresias's accusations against Oedipus (483-495; 504-511)?

Page 50: Welcome to today’s class Presented by Md. Munibur Rahman Assistant Professor Department of English Jessore Govt City College, Jessore

Suffering= pathos• What has Oedipus done to deserve

such awful suffering? Why must he suffer?

Page 51: Welcome to today’s class Presented by Md. Munibur Rahman Assistant Professor Department of English Jessore Govt City College, Jessore

Tragedy=an aesthetic question mark

• The dramatic expression of an enquiry into suffering, an aesthetic question mark performed in enacted pain.

• While representing an instance of suffering in dramatic form, always asks why it has occurred.

• Pathology= the study of diseases• Etiology= the causes of diseases or a study of

causes

Page 52: Welcome to today’s class Presented by Md. Munibur Rahman Assistant Professor Department of English Jessore Govt City College, Jessore

hubris

• "ungodly pride" (hubris) or "tragic flaw" (hamartia)

Page 53: Welcome to today’s class Presented by Md. Munibur Rahman Assistant Professor Department of English Jessore Govt City College, Jessore

First Stasimon , 463-512.

• The Chorus are fearful of the pronouncement of the seer, but declare their loyalty to their king.

Page 54: Welcome to today’s class Presented by Md. Munibur Rahman Assistant Professor Department of English Jessore Govt City College, Jessore

Second Episode , 513-862. (Creon, Oedipus, Chorus; Jocasta)

Read (3): p.17-18

Page 55: Welcome to today’s class Presented by Md. Munibur Rahman Assistant Professor Department of English Jessore Govt City College, Jessore

Second Episode , 513-862. (Creon, Oedipus, Chorus; Jocasta)

• Creon is indignant at Oedipus' accusations. • They argue over the charge. Jocasta tries to

intervene. Kommos , 649-697. • The Chorus advise restraint and Oedipus lets

Creon go, though he declares him an enemy. Oedipus tells Jocasta the source of the dispute.

• Jocasta tells the story of Laius' death, and Oedipus recognizes many details: but he was a lone killer, whereas a band of killers was reported.

• Oedipus worries about the oracle; Jocasta denounces its veracity, adducing the prophesy about her son.

Page 56: Welcome to today’s class Presented by Md. Munibur Rahman Assistant Professor Department of English Jessore Govt City College, Jessore

Second Stasimon , 863-910. (Chorus)

Read (4): p.20-21

Page 57: Welcome to today’s class Presented by Md. Munibur Rahman Assistant Professor Department of English Jessore Govt City College, Jessore

Second Stasimon , 863-910. (Chorus)

• Ode to the sanctity of divine law. • The tyrant who ignores justice and reverence

for the gods will fall. • The oracles must be true.

Page 58: Welcome to today’s class Presented by Md. Munibur Rahman Assistant Professor Department of English Jessore Govt City College, Jessore

Third Episode , 911-1085. (Jocasta, Messenger, Chorus; Oedipus)

• A messenger arrives from Corinth announcing the death of Polybus and Oedipus' ascension.

• He allays Oedipus' fear of the oracle (that he will marry his mother) by telling him of his true birth.

• Over Jocasta's objections Oedipus vows to continue his search for the truth. Jocasta runs into the palace.

Page 59: Welcome to today’s class Presented by Md. Munibur Rahman Assistant Professor Department of English Jessore Govt City College, Jessore

Third Stasimon , 1086-1109. (Chorus)

• Ode to Mt. Cithaeron: we will soon know the parentage of Oedipus.

Page 60: Welcome to today’s class Presented by Md. Munibur Rahman Assistant Professor Department of English Jessore Govt City College, Jessore

Fourth Episode , 1110-1185. (Oedipus, Shepherd, Chorus)

• The shepherd arrives who exposed the infant of Laius and escaped when Laius was killed. Oedipus' parentage becomes clear. Oedipus rushes into the palace.

Page 61: Welcome to today’s class Presented by Md. Munibur Rahman Assistant Professor Department of English Jessore Govt City College, Jessore

Fourth Stasimon , 1186-1222. (Chorus)

• No man is blest: happiness is but an illusion, for even the great power and blessings of Oedipus have come to a fall.

Page 62: Welcome to today’s class Presented by Md. Munibur Rahman Assistant Professor Department of English Jessore Govt City College, Jessore

Exodos , 1223-1530.

Read (5): p.27-32

Page 63: Welcome to today’s class Presented by Md. Munibur Rahman Assistant Professor Department of English Jessore Govt City College, Jessore

Exodos , 1223-1530. (Messenger, Chorus; Oedipus, Creon)

• A messenger announces the suicide of Jocasta and the self-inflicted blinding of Oedipus. Oedipus appears to lament his fate. Creon appears.

• Oedipus begs him to take care of his children; Antigone and Ismene (mute) arrive to comfort their father. Creon persuades Oedipus to return to the palace, and assumes the kingship.

Page 64: Welcome to today’s class Presented by Md. Munibur Rahman Assistant Professor Department of English Jessore Govt City College, Jessore

Recommended

• Greek Tragedyhttp://classics.uc.edu/~johnson/tragedy/ • http://memo.cgu.edu.tw/yu-yen/oedipus.htm • http://classics.uc.edu/~johnson/tragedy/sum

maries/oedipusrex.html

Page 65: Welcome to today’s class Presented by Md. Munibur Rahman Assistant Professor Department of English Jessore Govt City College, Jessore

Thank you!