Oedipus Rex: Imagery of Blindness and Sight as a Medium to the Themes

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In the play, Oedipus Rex, written by Sophocles, an honourable and admirable Greek king named Oedipus rules the town of Thebes. He is left in mental turmoil and decay as his unknown, corrupt and immoral past is slowly revealed during his quest to find the culprit who murdered King Laius. The newly exposed past suddenly transforms his glory and respect into shame and humiliation. After he learns about his wicked past he stabs his eyes, which lead to his blindness. During the course of the play, references to blindness and vision constantly recur, giving the reader an enhanced and more insightful look into the themes of the play. Some themes that are expressed through these references include truth and knowledge, guilt, and freewill versus fate.

Throughout the play Sophocles constructs imagery based upon blindness and sight which embodies the prominent theme of the search for knowledge and truth in the play. Oedipus first innocently and honourably tries to find out the truth about the murdered king Laius, but the truth tortures him as he finds out that he was married to his mother, and had murdered his own father King Laius. After the reality and truth becomes apparent he blinds himself, because he was unable to cope with such sordid knowledge. Oedipus says that ``How could I bear to see when all my sight was horror everywhere. `` (Line 1308) This shows that even though he tried to be knowledgeable and seek out the truth, in the end he was unable to endure it. The act of blinding himself is symbolic because it is his way of escaping the true reality which he seeks to find. It also conveys the idea that he is giving up on his search for knowledge, because as agreed by many philosophers, the vision is the sense in which most of ou...

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... the truth about his flawed and corrupt past which forces him to feel responsible for his actions, so he blinds himself fleeing from power, knowledge and blame. This play is very multifaceted because the entire plot can be interpreted in different ways, especially regarding the theology of fate or freewill, which changes the audience’s interpretation of Oedipus and the overall themes. Sophocles is able to convey the universal message of the human condition because it exposes that even though we may have an advantage through wealth and prosperity, in the end every person is limited in their comprehension of worldly knowledge and that every human is liable to error. The idea of knowledge and its burdens is shown by Sophocles through the medium of imagery, which helps develop and illustrate the themes of the play efficiently, creating a deep appreciation of the text.

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