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Jim Creus Mrs. Baldi

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Term Paper TitleJim Creus Mrs. Baldi
# of Words1446
# of Pages (250 words per page double spaced)5.78

Jim Creus                                        Mrs. Baldi
English IV                                        2/18/97

Three Female Characters in Greek Tragedies
     
     In the times of the ancient Greeks, women had an unpretentious role.  They were expected to do take on the accepted role of a woman.  In most cases, a woman’s role is restricted to bearing young, raising children, and housework.  In Sophocles’ Oedipus  the King, Antigone, and Medea, the dominant female characters impacted upon men with authority and political power.  It is an inescapable fate that one of these characters will fall, and that the Gods have control over everyone’s fate.  Each dominant female character portrays her willpower and commitment to their beliefs.  This is what leads to the inevitable tragedy.  
     In Oedipus the King, Jocasta, is Oedipus’ wife and the sister of Creon.  She became a part of doomed Theban dynasty when she married Laius, the King of Thebes.  As a result, the marriage had brought together two branches of the family of Cadmus and seemed to guarantee political strength.  She became disappointed because she was unable to produce an heir to the throne.  Seeking a solution, Lauis went to the oracle at Delphi and asked how the proble might be overcome.  Instead, the oracle proclaimed that the son born to Jocasta would be his murderer.  Upon hearing the prophecy, Lauis rejected all women.  This infuriated Jocasta and she had gotten Lauis drunk, and slept with him.  This proves that Jocasta refuses to be outdone, even by her husband.  When Jocasta had given birth to a baby boy (Oedipus), Lauis had it sent away by a messenger to die of exposure high in the mountains.  A shepherd discovered the boy and gave it to his master King Polybus.  
     As years passed, Thebes was plagued by a Sphinx that sought the answer to a riddle.  It asked for the answer and killed everyone who had guessed incorrectly.  This had riddled Thebes’ commerce and left its people disgruntled.  To make matters worse, news reached the city that Lauis had been killed by unknown assailants.  Desperate and in need of help, Creon (now the regent of Thebes) had offered up the throne and Jocasta to anyone who could solve the Sphinx’s riddle.  
     In the meantime, Oedipus came across the Sphinx and solved the riddle.  He ended up in Thebes because he went to the oracle at Delphi just like his father Lauis.  Now Oedipus is King of Thebes and another problem arises, a plague.  He searches far and wide for the solution to save his people.  Prophets and wisemen were brought i...

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