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Oedipus the King

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Oedipus The King

Uploaded by texaSS on Jun 19, 2005

Oedipus' main conflicts in Sophocles' play, Oedipus the King, revolve around the fact that he did not know himself. In his lifetime, Oedipus always believed he knew where he came from and where he belonged. And it took him a long time to finally be convinced of his true past and realize his worst fear came true.

Oedipus more or less rebuffs any suggestion that contradicts what he believes his past is comprised of. He thinks he knows who his parents really are, but Oedipus overhears a rumor that suggests his parents aren’t who he thinks they are. With that knowledge in mind, Oedipus tries to extract the truth by visiting the Oracle. The trip only results in a prophecy that informs him that he will kill his father and marry his mother. At that, Oedipus flees the city of Corinth and travels to Thebes to escape the horrible fate. But Oedipus was not even completely convinced of who exactly his parents were.

Other than not knowing factual information about his origination, Oedipus also seems to ‘forget’ his past fairly easily. Oedipus, who is the current king of Thebes, asks a prophet referred to as Teirsias to tell him who murdered the former king, Laius. At the beginning of the confrontation, Teirasias refuses to tell Oedipus any information. But after an agitated conversation, Oedipus almost forces Teirasias to reveal all that he knows:

Oedipus: I know nothing! Repeat your truth!

Teirsias: I said, you are the murderer you are searching for. (81-82)

Even after this, Oedipus simply would not accept that as the truth. He cannot see himself as someone who would harm a city by murdering their king and bringing a plague upon the city. He likes or prefers to think of himself as the one who came to their rescue and lifted the plague off the city.

Later on in the play, Oedipus has a conversation with Jocasta. She tells Oedipus about a prophecy who proclaimed Lauis would be murdered by his own son. With that

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