Freud, Incest, Murder, and Oedipus Rex (King) Freud's Sophocles Oedipus royal family analysis (King) shows that Oedipus really includes it. Incest nature. This is reflected in not only marriage between Edepes and his mother, but also for the child he gave birth. This is due to the irrational preference for his daughters Antigone and Ismane. His attention to her daughter is deep and sexy, but he sees his son as a creature that can take care of himself. He fascinated her daughter unconsciously, but he also worried that his daughter would become social runaway and that he could not get married.
The tragic story from Greek playwright Sophocles "Oedipus King" is a famous research drama full of murder, incest, incidents of people about the truth of his life. This is a story that you may know, because Oedipus killed his father and married his mother (of course, unconsciously). This drama described psychology before Freud. About 430 BC, King Edpsus was excited for a long time with his twists and turns, an attractive character and an unbelievable tragic end. This work will remain in the greatest script of the classical theater which has never existed before.
In a rare comparison of Aeschylus 'Prometheus and Sophocles' Oedipus, Harold Bloom said "Floyd is" immoral "called Oedipus, because the gods ordered incest and uncatchable, so the edeps are our general Participated in unconscious guilt Edpus complex not misuse complex. Her research for the Courtadel Institute for belonging to the protagoras platatus as an important contributor to the early development of Prometheus mythology "Myth of Prometheus Olgaragio Lazio in the study on Plato's Prometheus stated that there is no more challenging and dramatic allegation about the tragedy of Ecilien.
The psychoanalyst believes that Sophocles can be seen through Freud 's lens, and the edeps complex is a taboo of insanity, guilt and aggression. However, looking at Sophocles' Oedipus Rex (and other theatricals), it turns out that these themes are probably only a part of the dynamics of the theater and are probably not the most important part. This paper describes the difference between Edipus dynamics seen by Freud and Edpsus dynamics in the work of Sophocles and proposes possible explanations. The central theme I discussed was Oedipus' shame and blindness.