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Oedipus Trilogy

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Oedipus the King Play Summary

Oedipus at Colonus Play Summary

Antigone Play Summary

Sophocles Biography

Personal Background
Literary Writing
Honors and Awards

About the Oedipus Trilogy

Historical Background
Greek Theater and Its Development
The Oedipus Myth
Dramatic Irony

Oedipus the King: Summary and Analysis

Lines 1–168
Lines 169–244
Lines 245–526
Lines 527–572
Lines 573–953
Lines 954–996
Lines 997–1194
Lines 1195–1214
Lines 1215–1310
Lines 1311–1350
Lines 1351–1684

Oedipus at Colonus: Summary and Analysis

Lines 1–141
Lines 142–268
Lines 269–576
Lines 577–616
Lines 617–761
Lines 762–817
Lines 818–1192
Lines 1193–1239
Lines 1240–1377
Lines 1378–1410
Lines 1411–1645
Lines 1646–1694
Lines 1695–1765
Lines 1766–1788
Lines 1789–2001

Antigone: Summary and Analysis

Lines 1–116
Lines 117–178
Lines 179–376
Lines 377–416
Lines 417–655
Lines 656–700
Lines 701–878
Lines 879–894
Lines 895–969
Lines 970–1034
Lines 1035–1089
Lines 1090–1237
Lines 1238–1273
Lines 1274–1470

The Oedipus Trilogy: Character List

Oedipus the King
Oedipus at Colonus
Antigone

The Oedipus Trilogy: Character Analysis

Oedipus
Creon
Antigone
Ismene
Polynices
Theseus
Tiresias
Jocasta
Eurydice

The Oedipus Trilogy: Critical Essays

The Power of Fate in the Oedipus Trilogy
Ritual and Transcendence in the Oedipus Trilogy

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The Oedipus Trilogy: Critical Essays

The Power of Fate in the Oedipus Trilogy

Are people truly responsible for their actions? This question has puzzled humanity throughout history. Over the centuries, people have pondered the influence of divine or diabolical power, environment, genetics, even entertainment, as determining how free any individual is in making moral choices.

The ancient Greeks acknowledged the role of Fate as a reality outside the individual that shaped and determined human life. In modern times, the concept of Fate has developed the misty halo of romantic destiny, but for the ancient Greeks, Fate represented a terrifying, unstoppable force.

Fate was the will of the gods — an unopposable reality ritually revealed by the oracle at Delphi, who spoke for Apollo himself in mysterious pronouncements. The promise of prophecy drew many, but these messages usually offered the questioner incomplete, maddenly evasive answers that both illuminated and darkened life's path. One famous revelation at Delphi offered a general the tantalizing prophesy that a great victory would be won if he advanced on his enemy. The oracle, however, did not specify to whom the victory would go.

By the fifth century, B.C., Athenians frankly questioned the power of the oracle to convey the will of the gods. Philosophers such as Socrates opened rational debate on the nature of moral choices and the role of the gods in human affairs. Slowly, the belief in a human being's ability to reason and to choose gained greater acceptance in a culture long devoted to the rituals of augury and prophecy. Socrates helped to create the Golden Age with his philosophical questioning, but Athens still insisted on the proprieties of tradition surrounding the gods and Fate, and the city condemned the philosopher to death for impiety.


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