King Edpsus as a hero of a classical Greek tragedy defined his term "tragedy" as "a person who is not a very kind and just person" in his poetry. Fall is for him, but because of some mistakes in the judgment that "heroic wealth change should not be a change from suffering to happiness, but from happiness to suffering". Based on what he believes is the best tragedy ever, Sophocle's Oedipus Rex.
Greek drama of King Oedipus, Oedipus is clearly Aristotle's tragedy. It is consistent with the five main criteria of tragedy: tragic heroes of noble birth, tragic defects, collapse of heroes, moments of regret and catharsis. Aristotle defines Edepus as a clear example of the form and purpose of Aristotle's tragedy in his "poetry". In tragedy, the Greeks dramaed the climax of heroic living, and the story of Oedipus is no exception. By using various literature ... Comedy and tragedy | | According to Aristotle comedy (he guessed about this in poetry), ancient comedy comes from Comos, a curious and wonderful scene. It seems that a group of festival men sang, danced and played images of the big penis. (If the theory is right, by the way it gives a new meaning to the phrase "vertical routine.") Link the origin of the comedy to a penis, is it accurate or not?
King Oedipus can be regarded as a typical hero of a classical tragedy. Aristotle, the first philosopher of the theoretical theater art, apparently studied the edeps, based on the quality of tragedy heroes, and used Edipus as an example. In Aristotle's concept, a tragic hero occupies a high position, lives in a prosperous environment, and is an outstanding person unhappy for misjudgment. Aristotle used the word "Hamachia" to mean the tragic weakness of a hero. According to Aristotle's tragic view, tragic heroes will become obvious behavioral qualities, clever and powerful, but not perfect. A ruining party that collapsed or collapsed completely like a saint would be contrary to moral expectation and the audience would think that this declining design is not so chaotic and irrational. Edipsus is neither a saint nor a hooligan. Despite his quality, he still fell for his mistake.
In Sophocles' play "Oedipus the King", Oedipus is a hero of a classical tragedy. According to Aristotle's definition, Edeps is a tragic hero because of being a king, and his life will collapse when he finds a story of life. Aristotle describes some of the features that identify tragic heroes. For example, a tragic hero must lead to his own downfall, his fate is not worth it, his punishment goes beyond the crime, and he must also be noble and talented. Edipus fell in love with his idealized self, but the "Narcissus" which is depressed even though it is magnificent can not truly love her (Miller 67). According to Aristotle's tragedy and views on narcissism, all the above features make Oedipus a tragic hero