Oedipus the King

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Sophocles’ use of irony is amongst the greatest of all time, as demonstrated masterfully in Oedipus the King. He displays both ambition and understated humour by using irony in diverse ways, both cosmic and dramatic, as well as verbal irony to add a greater level of wit. Every word spoken holds great symbolic weight and those words contribute to a narrative that reflects the gods plans. Adversely the work of Johnathan Swift takes the form of a social satire, combining economic arguments with a sociopolitical commentary to reflect the tragedy of the people. The use of irony in A Modest Proposal is not a structural technique; it is instead the style of the essay and it is written to reflect the crude nature of humanity. Irony develops from the programmatic methods the state uses to control the population while criminalizing abortion. Swift’s intention is to both engage and infuriate the audience, allowing them to see horrific civil inconsistencies in the real world through a reflection by his narrative. A description of a world where abortion is considered infanticide and is hence immoral, but eating a human baby is morally grounded, holds a mirror to society’s absurdity.
The initial sign of cosmic irony in Oedipus the King takes place before the play formally begins and is not understood by the characters until the second half. In the prologue of Oedipus the King the childhood of Oedipus and the marriage of Queen Jocasta and King Laius are briefly explained. King Laius is cursed for sinning as a young man and upon hearing that his son would kill him and mate with his own mother, he attempts to kill the boy. While Oedipus survives he is secretly raised lovingly in the city of Corinth by King Polybus and Queen Merope. Exhibiting cu...

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...e or by cruel joke. While Oedipus the King’s irony is strikingly more nuanced, it is still a play on the topic of fathering children by one’s own mother. In general circumstances’ being both father and brother to children is far from a subtle topic, however, Sophocles uses the immoral to display the downfall of the hero, lowering him to the lowest possible rank, plagued infidel.

Works Cited
Colebrook, Claire. Irony. New York: Taylor and Francis, 2003. Print.
Greene, Roland. "Satire." The Princeton Encyclopedia of Poetry and Poetics. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2012. 1255-1258. Print.
Morreall, John. "Philosophy of Humor." The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (2013). Web. 6 November 2013.
Sophocles. The Three Theban Plays. Trans. Robert Fagles. London: Allen Lane, 1982. Print.
Swift, Jonathan. A Modest Proposal. Columbus: C. E. Merrill, 1969. Print.

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