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Who Is Oedipus A Hero

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Oedipus, however, is a contradictory hero, an ambiguous model. Indeed, it represents both superior wisdom and absolute horror. Oedipus is the equivalent of incest. He commits crimes that disrupt the order of the world and that bring plague on the city. So do not think of him as a hero of entity worthy of admiration.
Moreover, he is not subject to action, his destiny, he does not control the plot, as one would expect it from a hero. He only submits to the prophecies spoken by the gods, he is only a pawn in their plans. Although he seems active, leading a quest to get to know himself, his position is not heroic since he is the last to discover the truth about his origins. So that's rather a pathetic image offered by the character of Oedipus, on whom the spell falls. It is more a martyr a role reinforced …show more content…
In both
In this case, the spectator's consideration of the protagonist is far from that which should normally be brought to a hero, to whom one must be able to identify. The role
Oedipus would be that of a detestable anti-hero and it is expected that the viewer considers it as a model for actions not to lead, the behavior not to have.
Oedipus also moves away from the image of the hero by letting his passions dominate him.Thus considers as naive, impulsive and angry. Indeed, Odipe loses all cold blood and very easily won over Tiresias, a wise man he is supposed to respect, going as far as make the absurd consideration that it is he who committed the crime. His nervousness is palpable in a lexical field of anger and highly developed violence Oedipus does not control himself, accuses wrong Creon to conspire against him, and proliferate threats of expulsion and death as soon as his interlocutors wish not to divulge information, conveying an image of tyrant rather than that of a reasonable person. His lunacy reaction of does not help to improve the image of being puerile that the viewer could

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