Saturday, September 20, 2014

Blog 1: Oedipus' Hamartia

    Most greek tragedies feature a great man that suffers from a fatal flaw, to such an extent that he is destroyed. Oedipus is one such man, and his weakness, or hamartia, is his hubris, or great pride. Pride is emnity--it can be observed in those that see themselves as above others, and are easily angered by others challenging them. It was pride that caused Oedipus to unknowingly commit awful sin--killing his father, marrying his mother, and causing her to bear him children and siblings in one.

    Oedipus' pride is so great that it makes him furiously angry with others, enough to want to kill them. When Oedipus hears from Tireseas, the blind prophet, that it was he who killed the late king and brought plague upon his people, he is furious, and convinces himself that Tireseas is lying, and is in the employ of his brother-in-law, Creon. he threatens the prophet, a servant of the God Apollo: "Do you really think you can say this unpunished?" ( Sophocles 23). He proceeds to accuse Tireseas of being a false prophet, a fake, and not a messenger from God. He no longer wants advice from Apollo's prophet-- he declares, "I did not know what nonsense you would speak, or I would hardly have sent for you" (25) In essence, he rejects the word of a God, through his servant. He believes Creon is attempting to take the throne. When he confronts Creon, Creon asks, "What do you want? To cast me from this land?" to which Oedipus replies, "Hardly--I want you to die, not flee" ( Sophocles 32) Oedipus' pride is so great that he is willing to kill others that threaten him.

    As the play continues, we learn that the pride and anger we see in Oedipus is nothing new--he confides in Jocasta that he heard a prophecy from an oracle that he would kill his father and marry his mother, and he fled his home, Corinth, to escape this fate--to attempt to escape the will of the Gods, and prove them wrong. He believed he could defy the Gods--a great example of hubris. As he traveled away, he met a chariot on the road, and the chariot drove him off the road. Oedipus admits, "In my anger I struck the driver, turning me off the road, and the old man, when he saw, watched me as I passed the chariot and struck me on the head with the two-pronged goad" (Sophocles 38-39). Insulted at being pushed off the road, unwilling to move aside for a larger, more difficult to maneuver chariot, and infuriated that an old man would hit him on the head, Oedipus kills them all, fulfilling the prophecy of Apollo--he would kill his own father. Thus, Oedipus brings about his own downfall through his hamartia: his pride.

    Even after the prophecies are fulfilled, Oedipus and his mother are not aware, until Oedipus begins digging up his past and attempting to find out who his parents are. Jocasta, Oedipus'  mother and wife, begins to realize what happened, and begs him to stop. "No, by the gods! If indeed you care for your own life, do not go after this! I grieve enough...obey me, I pray. Do not do this...what I say is best." Oedipus replies, "I cannot be persuaded not to learn this clearly...what you say is best has long annoyed me" (Sophocles 48). In his pride, he ignores the warning of his wife, assuming she knows nothing he does not. Later, when he is questioning the shepherd who spared his life as a baby, he is angry when the shepherd refuses to speak. He threatens him multiple times, finally declaring, "You are dead if I have to ask it again!" (Sophocles 52). Oedipus is so determined to learn of his parentage that he ignores the warnings of others, refusing to believe they have wisdom he lacks. He drives on, heedless of their attempts to stop him, until he learns the truth of what he has done. His pride, his refusal to listen to others, strips away the protection of ignorance. With full knowledge of the monstrosity of what has happened, Jocasta hangs herself, and Oedipus blinds himself and goes into exile.

    Oedipus' hamartia, his pride, is the root of his misfortunes. He attempts to defy fate, ignores the prophecies of Apollo's servants, threatens those who do not submit to his will with pain or death, and refuses to listen to the council of those who know better than him. In the end, he has lost everything. One day he is king, a leader and savior of his people, with a wife and children he loves, and the next he is the next he is the most wretched of men, murderer of his father, husband to his mother, brother to his children. His mother and wife is dead, his eyes are blinded by his own hand, and his kindgom is in the hands of his brother-in-law and uncle Creon.

Works Cited
Sophocles. Oedipus Rex. Trans. J. E. Thomas. Clayton: Prestwick House, 2005. Print.

4 comments:

  1. You did a great job with your argument, Rosalind! Your examples truly do demonstrate Oedipus' pride. If he could have learned to control his ego, perhaps he could have escaped what he called his "fate." I also like how you point out that Oedipus' pride continues onward, even after he has killed his father, when he refuses to heed the warnings of his wife/mother. I never considered this to be a form of pride, but if Oedipus hadn't ignored her, he could have just remained ignorant.

    ReplyDelete
  2. This is such a great argument. I think that it is so interesting to see even centuries ago pride was the root of so much misfortune. I think that's probably why books like Oedipus Rex are still around today.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Loved your analysis Rosalind! Oedipus was the extreme of pride and anger. It's interesting that Oedipus' downfall can be pointed to the first time he became angry and killed Laius. I also liked how pointed out Oedipus' pride of needing to know about his past lead to more of his destruction. Guess I need to work on my anger-management issues :) Loved your post!!

    ReplyDelete
  4. Your argument is really great and has a lot of very convincing points. Oedipus was very prideful and wrongly so because he ended up fulfilling every negative prophesy because of it.

    ReplyDelete