-first performed c. 429 b.c.. the meaning of oedipus is “swollen foot”. as a child, king oedipus...

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Page 1: -first performed c. 429 B.C.. The meaning of Oedipus is “swollen foot”. As a child, King Oedipus was abandoned with his ankles and feet bound and pinned

-first performed c. 429 B.C .

Page 2: -first performed c. 429 B.C.. The meaning of Oedipus is “swollen foot”. As a child, King Oedipus was abandoned with his ankles and feet bound and pinned

• The meaning of Oedipus is “swollen foot”. As a child, King Oedipus was abandoned with his ankles and feet bound and pinned together, scarring him.

• These scars are representative of a fate that he cannot escape.

Page 3: -first performed c. 429 B.C.. The meaning of Oedipus is “swollen foot”. As a child, King Oedipus was abandoned with his ankles and feet bound and pinned

“What creature walks on four legs in the morning, on two at noon, and on three in the evening?”

Oedipus saves the people of Thebes from the merciless sphinx, but ironically causes an even more serious threat to the Greek citizens.

Page 4: -first performed c. 429 B.C.. The meaning of Oedipus is “swollen foot”. As a child, King Oedipus was abandoned with his ankles and feet bound and pinned

Moreau

Bacon

Page 5: -first performed c. 429 B.C.. The meaning of Oedipus is “swollen foot”. As a child, King Oedipus was abandoned with his ankles and feet bound and pinned

Why do riddles intrigue us?

Page 6: -first performed c. 429 B.C.. The meaning of Oedipus is “swollen foot”. As a child, King Oedipus was abandoned with his ankles and feet bound and pinned

I can sizzle like bacon,I am made with an egg.

I have plenty of backbone, but lack a good leg.

I peel layers like onions, but still remain whole.

I can be long, like a flagpole, yet fit in a hole.

What am I?

Page 7: -first performed c. 429 B.C.. The meaning of Oedipus is “swollen foot”. As a child, King Oedipus was abandoned with his ankles and feet bound and pinned

Answer: Snake

Page 8: -first performed c. 429 B.C.. The meaning of Oedipus is “swollen foot”. As a child, King Oedipus was abandoned with his ankles and feet bound and pinned

There was a green house.Inside the green house

there was a white house.Inside the white house there was a red house.Inside the red house

there were lots of babies.What am I?

Page 9: -first performed c. 429 B.C.. The meaning of Oedipus is “swollen foot”. As a child, King Oedipus was abandoned with his ankles and feet bound and pinned

Answer: Watermelon

Page 10: -first performed c. 429 B.C.. The meaning of Oedipus is “swollen foot”. As a child, King Oedipus was abandoned with his ankles and feet bound and pinned

What is an Oedipal Complex?

Page 11: -first performed c. 429 B.C.. The meaning of Oedipus is “swollen foot”. As a child, King Oedipus was abandoned with his ankles and feet bound and pinned

Sigmund Freud (1856-1939), Austrian

Founded the psychoanalytic school of psychiatry

Page 12: -first performed c. 429 B.C.. The meaning of Oedipus is “swollen foot”. As a child, King Oedipus was abandoned with his ankles and feet bound and pinned

The Greek TheatreImportant Terms:

•Orchestra

•Theatron

•Parados

•Skene

•Proskenion

Page 13: -first performed c. 429 B.C.. The meaning of Oedipus is “swollen foot”. As a child, King Oedipus was abandoned with his ankles and feet bound and pinned

•The orchestra or “dancing place” is the circular platform where the chorus performed.

•The audience sat on stone benches in the theatron, “the seeing place.”

•Extending from the orchestra to each side of the theatron were two broad aisles, the parados, a term which also identified the entrance song of the chorus in a tragedy. (Mnemonic = parade, the procession of the chorus both in and out of the theater)

•Perpendicular to the orchestra was the skene, a rectangular building with three doors in the front, providing a generic backdrop fro the action of the play as well as an area into which actors could exit from a scene in order to change costumes/masks/roles.

•The proskenion was a small platform in front of the skene which allowed the actors more visibility and the ability to separate themselves from the chorus in the orchestra below. We now refer to this part of a modern stage as a proscenium.

Page 14: -first performed c. 429 B.C.. The meaning of Oedipus is “swollen foot”. As a child, King Oedipus was abandoned with his ankles and feet bound and pinned
Page 15: -first performed c. 429 B.C.. The meaning of Oedipus is “swollen foot”. As a child, King Oedipus was abandoned with his ankles and feet bound and pinned

Skene

Orchestra (Chorus)

Proskenion

Page 16: -first performed c. 429 B.C.. The meaning of Oedipus is “swollen foot”. As a child, King Oedipus was abandoned with his ankles and feet bound and pinned

Doorways into the skene

Page 17: -first performed c. 429 B.C.. The meaning of Oedipus is “swollen foot”. As a child, King Oedipus was abandoned with his ankles and feet bound and pinned

Ancient Greek theaters were huge, seating up to 20,000 people (a large Broadway theater seats about 3,000), which necessitated impressive acoustics from sound bouncing off of the skene and the stone seats of the audience, as well as certain features of the actors' costumes.

Page 18: -first performed c. 429 B.C.. The meaning of Oedipus is “swollen foot”. As a child, King Oedipus was abandoned with his ankles and feet bound and pinned

The actors wore buskins (platform shoes) which helped not only to make the characters being portrayed appear larger than life, befitting their importance in myth and legend, but also helped project their voices to the huge audience.

Also, the actors wore large hollow masks that helped identify to the huge audience who each character was, magnify the size of the actor to befit the larger-than-life character or story being portrayed and also amplify the actor’s voice by serving as a megaphone

Page 19: -first performed c. 429 B.C.. The meaning of Oedipus is “swollen foot”. As a child, King Oedipus was abandoned with his ankles and feet bound and pinned

Themes/Conflicts/Motifs • Free Will vs. Fate• Predictions and

Prophecies• Truth vs. Ignorance• Intuition vs. Policy• Mortal weakness

when compared to the strength of the gods

• Power’s fleetingness• Pride and Envy

Page 20: -first performed c. 429 B.C.. The meaning of Oedipus is “swollen foot”. As a child, King Oedipus was abandoned with his ankles and feet bound and pinned

The Chorus:Aristotle said the chorus should be regarded as one of the actors

-Uses symbolic choreography-Often fickle, obtuse and perceptive-Comments on the events witnessed on stage

Page 21: -first performed c. 429 B.C.. The meaning of Oedipus is “swollen foot”. As a child, King Oedipus was abandoned with his ankles and feet bound and pinned

The Greek tragedy is divided into five distinct sections:

• Prologue (Prologos): Exposition• Parados: The entrance song of the chorus

(named after broad aisles which the chorus uses to enter and exit)

• Episodes (Scenes): Performed by the actors

• Stasimons (Odes): Choral passage, the chorus sang and danced these lyric poems

• Exodos: Conclusion ending with the chorus singing their final lines as they exit

Page 22: -first performed c. 429 B.C.. The meaning of Oedipus is “swollen foot”. As a child, King Oedipus was abandoned with his ankles and feet bound and pinned

Dramatic Structure of Oedipus Rex

1. Prologos

2. Parados

3. Scene 1

4. Ode 1

5. Scene 2

6. Ode 2

7. Scene 3

8. Ode 3

9. Scene 4

10.Ode 4

11.Exodos

Page 23: -first performed c. 429 B.C.. The meaning of Oedipus is “swollen foot”. As a child, King Oedipus was abandoned with his ankles and feet bound and pinned

To appreciate the intensifying effect of the dramatic irony employed as a result of the

audience’s preexisting knowledge of Oedipus’ plight, we

must be prepared before encountering the play.

Page 24: -first performed c. 429 B.C.. The meaning of Oedipus is “swollen foot”. As a child, King Oedipus was abandoned with his ankles and feet bound and pinned

Before reading Oedipus Rex, you must be familiar with the legend of Oedipus, as were the citizens of

ancient Greece.

For homework, please read Edith Hamilton’s rendering of the legend

of Oedipus before you read the prologue (pages 3-10).