Tuesday, October 1, 2019
The Punishment of Oedipus the King (Oedipus Rex) :: Oedipus the King Oedipus Rex
      The Punishment of Oedipus the King                 At the end of Sophocles' Oedipus Rex, Oedipus,  king of Thebes, ends     up banished forever from his kingdom. Additionally, Oedipus physically  puts     out his own eyes, for several reasons which will be discussed later. The     question is: Did Oedipus deserve his punishments? There are many factors     that must be considered in answering this, including how Oedipus himself     felt about his situation. His blinding was as much symbolic as it was     physical pain. After all factors have been considered, I think that only     Oedipus' banishment was the necessary punishment..                 It is important to keep in mind the whole  basic reasoning for     Oedipus' search for Laius' killers: he wished to put an end to a deadly     plague, and that plague would only be stopped when said murderer is   killed,     or driven from the land (pp 4-5). Thusly, when it is revealed that  Oedipus     himself murdered Laius, then banishment seems to be the only option.  Death,     in my mind, is not valid simply because of what it might do to the     kingdom's people. Even though it seems that Oedipus has not been a     particularly good monarch, in fact his only major accomplishment seems to     be killing the Sphinx all those years ago, having a king put to death  could     have serious repercussions on the rest of the kingdom. So in the end, the     only way to cure the plague and keep the kingdom stable seems to be the     banishment of Oedipus. In this case, the question of whether or not he     deserved to be punished seems irrelevant; Oedipus' only goal was to stop     the plague and by leaving, he has accomplished that goal. Banishment was     the only choice.                 But what exactly was Oedipus being punished  for? Even after re-     reading the play, this still seems to be a gray area. Incest? Immoral, to     be sure, but Oedipus was obviously ignorant to his actions, and to my     knowledge, in Sophoclean times, there was no written law against it and     therefore no punishment for it. Oedipus' punishment may have been for     killing Laius, but how could you punish someone for being a victim of  fate?     Greeks believed at the time of the play's writing that a man's life was "     woven" by the 3 fates (Clotho, Lachesis, and Atropos) and that he was     					    
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