Okonkwo And Oedipus

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In Things Fall Apart by Chinua Achebe, the life of Okonkwo depicts his journey of the desire to not be like his father, the desire to obtain a high title in his tribe, and provide for his family and grow and learn about the belief in the tribe. In the process of Okonkwo’s life, he takes on authority through his family, the tribe, and his belief, but it continues on how his wants and views take him elsewhere and the result of loss. In Oedipus the King by Ian Johnston, the life and prophesy of Oedipus and that one secret is the death of few and the impact of many throughout the kingdom from past, present, and future. A hero may not be the first word to describe Okonkwo and Oedipus, but as two prominent male characters they represent and demonstrate …show more content…

Another view in the definition of hero comes from Merriam-Webster Dictionary, describing a hero as “a mythological or legendary figures often of divine descent endowed with great strength or ability,” “a person admired for achievements and noble qualities,” and “the central figure in an event, period, or movement” (“Hero” 1). Oedipus and Okonkwo may both not be the pure definition of what a hero is, but take a quick look at how each character may slightly view their possible position of a representation of being a hero through inference. Looking at being a hero in the eyes of the beholder. Okonkwo may see himself as more of a hero in the fact that after coming back from exile he wanted to help his tribe reconnect and reconstruct themselves and come together as a community through friendships, families, and most importantly what they all believe in. In one viewpoint Okonkwo stuck to what he was taught to believe in and what he grew up believing and the belief that he taught and encouraged upon his children to believe and grow in. Then on the other hand is Oedipus one who in the eyes of the beholder may believe he is not much of a hero. The reasons that may be is plain and simple the prophesy, the curse. In how he was actually supposed to die to stay away from the prophesy, but instead he brought mourning, pain, fear, confusion, and much more without even knowing his true identity for more than half of his life. That is how it seems the author portrayed each character’s view of himself and the relation of being a

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