Oedipus the King - Sophocles - So You Haven't Read

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  • Опубліковано 24 тра 2022
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    So you haven't read Oedipus the King by Sophocles? Well, get your tragedy mask ready as we tell you about this masterpiece that has influenced the structure of western drama for millennia! Ranking as the top 10 hottest most amazing tragedies by our boi the late and great Aristotle!
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    ♪ Intro music: "Coffee Beans" by Mike Wuerth
    ♪ Outro music: "So You Haven't Read Theme" by Tiffany Roman
    #SoYouHaventRead #OedipustheKing #Sophocles

КОМЕНТАРІ • 306

  • @extrahistory
    @extrahistory  2 роки тому +37

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  • @GreasusGoldtooth
    @GreasusGoldtooth 2 роки тому +925

    If you think about it, it's kind of unfair that Oedipus has a complex named after him since he didn't know what he was doing.

    • @osurpless
      @osurpless 2 роки тому +115

      I blame Freud.
      When it comes to puritanical complexes, that (or Victorianism) is a safe bet…

    • @jlvfr
      @jlvfr 2 роки тому +17

      Right?! Right?! It's stupid.

    • @edcrichton9457
      @edcrichton9457 2 роки тому +46

      He was using a familiar term for the audience he expected to read his work. For the late 19th century early 20th century audience he could expect to have some basic knowledge of classic literature. That was an era when politicians still quoted ancient authors like Horace in parliamentary speeches.

    • @andromeda331
      @andromeda331 2 роки тому +10

      Yeah, it's of a Self-Fulfilling Prophecy.

    • @UnreasonableOpinions
      @UnreasonableOpinions 2 роки тому +11

      Ought to have called it the Oedipus Simple.

  • @Jon_the_Wizard
    @Jon_the_Wizard 2 роки тому +259

    At what point does Tiresias say to Oedipus, “dude, if you can’t see where this is going, you’re blinder than I am.”

    • @fullmoontales1749
      @fullmoontales1749 2 роки тому +28

      Overly Sarcastic Productions, is that you?

    • @kereminde
      @kereminde 2 роки тому +5

      @@fullmoontales1749 It's a variation: "Not-Nearly-Sarcastic-Enough Productions".

    • @stevemc01
      @stevemc01 2 роки тому +3

      When Tiresias senses Oedipus killed his dad like "stupid peasant. Begone."
      Tiresias: "oh bruuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuh"

    • @marogdaki
      @marogdaki 2 роки тому +9

      to be fair, Tiresias does say that! Also, the whole Tiresias-Oedipus dialogue is filled with eye-sight/seeing-the-truth wordplay. (And that's how Aristotele coins the term "tragic irony", as a reference to something the audience knows but the protagonist does not)

    • @fullmoontales1749
      @fullmoontales1749 2 роки тому +3

      The one thing I don't quite understand is, if your kingdom is suffering, isn't it your duty to find out why? Even if the answer is...that one?
      Or should Oedipus have just put up with the curse to preserve his own sanity?

  • @25rikimaru
    @25rikimaru 2 роки тому +261

    I got into such a massive argument with one of my professors in college because of this play. Ten minutes just arguing back and forth in front of an entire class. It wasn't even a literature class. It was supposed to be a political science lecture.

    • @isaactinnel6269
      @isaactinnel6269 2 роки тому +17

      Did you win

    • @darkhobo
      @darkhobo 2 роки тому +42

      You got into an argument over Paddington 2?

    • @PutoMedicoBrujo
      @PutoMedicoBrujo 2 роки тому +4

      what was the argument about?

    • @25rikimaru
      @25rikimaru 2 роки тому +58

      @@PutoMedicoBrujo The primary reason for Oedipus' downfall. I argued that it was more tragic that his fall came from his unceasing lust for truth. The professor leaned more towards Oedipus' pride.

    • @Dr.J.Konopinski
      @Dr.J.Konopinski 2 роки тому +36

      @@25rikimaru The main theme behind almost all ancient greek plays (especially Sophocles) is nemesis, i.e. divine retribution against hubris and arrogance. Your professor was right on pride and actually the seeking of truth is not something discouraged by the play. For ancient Athenians seeking the truth (i.e. philosophy) was a duty, even if it meant their downfall.

  • @ecurewitz
    @ecurewitz 2 роки тому +135

    Did you hear the joke about Oedipus and Midas? It was motherfucking gold!

  • @shawnheatherly
    @shawnheatherly 2 роки тому +136

    Paddington and Oedipus, such an iconic duo.

    • @MovieFan1912
      @MovieFan1912 2 роки тому +2

      But what do either of them have in common?

    • @alicerivierre
      @alicerivierre 2 роки тому +1

      What, Paddington the bear? WTF?!

  • @janvierr9906
    @janvierr9906 2 роки тому +38

    1. Use of Law & Order CHUNG CHUNG melted my heart.
    2. I would like the Paddington 2 analysis please. How much coffee do you need?

  • @UnreasonableOpinions
    @UnreasonableOpinions 2 роки тому +78

    It's a very great shame so many of Sophocles' plays were lost, considering every surviving one we have manages to still be played today. By accounts he won 80% of the competitions he entered and never got worse than second, though it's no great surprise the best work we have of his wasn't a winner - the most thematically-dense works often don't show their hand at first performance and take some digging to see how far down they go. He invented richer characters than was the standard before before and did so to enable more complete character arcs instead of standard progressions, and may have innovated having a third character on-stage to enable this by giving much more complex character interactions, though Themistius says that Aeschylus, his only real professional competition, was the first.

  • @PaulGAckerman
    @PaulGAckerman 2 роки тому +122

    The Law & Order sound just made me howl at work. Thank goodness I'm working from home or Is have some 'splaining to do with HR.

    • @extrahistory
      @extrahistory  2 роки тому +29

      It cracked me up too! I only get to see the videos at the end of production so I didn't see it coming!

    • @alicerivierre
      @alicerivierre 2 роки тому +2

      LOL, same! Extra Credits, you are hilarious!

  • @mjbull5156
    @mjbull5156 2 роки тому +100

    Oedipus' parents attempt to avoid fate, arranging for TY yeir son's death without making sure he actually died. Odious attempts to avoid fate by leaving home, leading him back to his bio parents.
    The shepherd: "Did I do that?"

  • @jurriendevries3673
    @jurriendevries3673 2 роки тому +154

    I would love an episode about Medea. I kinda consider it the 'perfect' tragedy. It just uses the fundamental properties of the two main characters to create an unavoidable disaster. There's no fate or randomness, just two people who create a situation that neither can get out of, and destroys everyone around them.

    • @fullmoontales1749
      @fullmoontales1749 2 роки тому +11

      Mostly yes, but Zeus and Hera get involved near the end because of Jason ditching Medea (I think)

    • @jayisabluebird
      @jayisabluebird Рік тому +4

      Medea is such a tragic story but damn is it good

    • @lolipedofin
      @lolipedofin Рік тому +4

      Odysseus would be interesting as well.

    • @cheyenne6913
      @cheyenne6913 11 місяців тому +5

      OSP has a really good video about the story of Medea. I highly recommend

    • @jurriendevries3673
      @jurriendevries3673 11 місяців тому +2

      @@cheyenne6913 I've seen it before, it's a great retelling of a classic, like all their stuff. I'm gonna watch it again now, probably gonna end up binging again... Oh well :)

  • @safaiaryu12
    @safaiaryu12 2 роки тому +59

    I did my bachelor's capstone on Antigone, one of several plays about Oedipus's sibling-children. If anyone is interested in Oedipus, I encourage you to read Aeschylus' Seven Against Thebes and then Sophocles' Antigone, which tell the fate of his two brother-sons and two sister-daughters. It's brutal.

    • @rolfs2165
      @rolfs2165 2 роки тому +8

      I've read Antigone, and yup, it's absolutely brutal.

    • @KSignalEingang
      @KSignalEingang 2 роки тому +8

      Antigone is just about my favorite play from the era, wildly powerful stuff.

    • @jogelvie
      @jogelvie Рік тому +4

      Yes I preferred Antigone to her father brothers story

    • @shaider1982
      @shaider1982 4 місяці тому +1

      I read summarized versions of the children/sinlings in Edith Hamilton's book, Mythology.

    • @safaiaryu12
      @safaiaryu12 4 місяці тому

      @@shaider1982 I think you typoed "siblings," but "sinlings" is SO appropriate...

  • @cheezemonkeyeater
    @cheezemonkeyeater 2 роки тому +27

    "You are Oedipus, King of Thebes!"
    Can I be literally anyone else, please?

  • @mesektet5776
    @mesektet5776 2 роки тому +57

    From the Bible to the popular song, there’s one name that we move right along, of all the things we hail as good, the most sublime is motherhood. There was once a fellow it seems, who carried this idea to extremes, he loved his mother and she loved him, and yet his story is rather grim...

    • @zemm69
      @zemm69 2 роки тому +7

      Tom Lehrer!

    • @theq4602
      @theq4602 2 роки тому +2

      Glad to see this song wasn't forgotten

    • @notdancooper923
      @notdancooper923 2 роки тому +6

      Yes he loved his mother like no other, his daughter was his sister and his son was his brother! One thing on which you can depend is - HE SURE KNEW WHO A BOY'S BEST FRIEND IS

    • @mesektet5776
      @mesektet5776 2 роки тому +2

      @@notdancooper923 When he saw what he had done, he tore his eyes out - one by one; A tragic end to a noble son who *loved* his mother.

    • @fullmoontales1749
      @fullmoontales1749 2 роки тому +2

      Apparently it's also wrong to love your big brother
      (joking, I've read 1984)

  • @SarahExpereinceRequiem
    @SarahExpereinceRequiem 2 роки тому +82

    There once lived a man named Oedipus Rex
    You may have heard about his odd complex
    His name appears in Freud's index
    'Cause he loved his mother ♫

    • @DanteGrey
      @DanteGrey 2 роки тому +1

      He really loved his motherrrrrr~

    • @MovieFan1912
      @MovieFan1912 Рік тому

      I see you like that Tom Lehrer song too.

  • @cheezemonkeyeater
    @cheezemonkeyeater 2 роки тому +32

    It's funny that satire takes its name because comedy plays were named after satyrs because a friend of mine who had only seen the word satyr in written form always pronounced it satire.

  • @blaster915
    @blaster915 2 роки тому +51

    Definitely miss Extra Mythology 🥺😢

    • @extrahistory
      @extrahistory  2 роки тому +22

      We do too!

    • @blaster915
      @blaster915 2 роки тому +6

      @@extrahistory there must be so many more you can cover! More legends from Japan, or tellings from Australia?

  • @A_Vicious_T-Rex
    @A_Vicious_T-Rex 2 роки тому +18

    I am convinced that Oedipus was the first person to wear socks and sandals. Because how else could his mother/wife miss his mangled feet and not ask about them.

    • @mjbull5156
      @mjbull5156 2 роки тому +3

      That lovely little detail was glossed over here.

    • @prestonjones1653
      @prestonjones1653 Рік тому +2

      Jewish folklore has a story about a demon who overthrew and impersonated Solomon for a month who also went around wearing socks, even when sleeping.
      So whether it was Oedipus or Asmodeus/Solomon we'll need to try and verify the dates of the stories to be totally sure.

  • @jojothebard6687
    @jojothebard6687 2 роки тому +12

    “Well, a boy’s best friend is his mother…”
    -Norman Bates

    • @MovieFan1912
      @MovieFan1912 Рік тому

      Is that a screeching violin I hear?

  • @ManiKind
    @ManiKind 2 роки тому +15

    There is also a play called "Antigone" which follows the story of oedipus' daughter with the same name

    • @bookbook9495
      @bookbook9495 2 роки тому +1

      Yeah, that’s the last of the trilogy

    • @baliyae
      @baliyae 2 роки тому +1

      I read that in high school.

    • @bookbook9495
      @bookbook9495 2 роки тому

      @@baliyae ah, middle school- Oedipus Rex was high school

  • @Tsuruchi_420
    @Tsuruchi_420 2 роки тому +10

    "You haven't seen Paddington 2???"
    Well, we already know what's gonna this series first April fools episode

  • @calebmarston4729
    @calebmarston4729 2 роки тому +6

    I like the idea that there is an alternate universe where this episode was about Paddington 2, and Oedipus was the punchline of that joke.

  • @AvalonDreamz
    @AvalonDreamz Рік тому +1

    It is amazing you really make this easy learning and listening to these stories that some may find tedious and have never got to read or didn't understand because...well public schools don't seem to want to bother much today and even though I have read it my children have not yet and they love listening to this channel as well because of the learning style. Very thankful for that guys!

  • @krealyesitisbeta5642
    @krealyesitisbeta5642 2 роки тому +8

    There was an Oedipus joke in the Mr. Peabody movie and I’ll never forget.

    • @osurpless
      @osurpless 2 роки тому

      There’s a quick one in Bill and Ted’s Excellent Adventure after Ted and the couch scene.
      Missy isn’t Bill’s mother either, so I guess it was in there only because a writer thought it was clever?

    • @stephenbaker9645
      @stephenbaker9645 2 роки тому

      There was one short reference in one of Mel Brooks' movies History of the World Part One.

    • @MovieFan1912
      @MovieFan1912 Рік тому

      There’s also mention of Oedipus by a man who puts the glad in gladiator.
      “Man, I thought I had problems!”

  • @paintbrushjewel
    @paintbrushjewel 7 місяців тому +2

    You could say “one often meets his destiny on the road he takes to avoid it”.
    - a very wise tortoise

  • @brockmckelvey7327
    @brockmckelvey7327 2 роки тому +9

    "Oedipus' mom has got it going on..."
    Also, what was the play that got 1st place?

  • @ceebee9195
    @ceebee9195 2 роки тому +53

    “There once was a man named Oedipus Rex,
    You may have heard about his odd complex,
    His name appears in Freud’s index,
    Because he loved his mother.”
    Love some Tom Lehrer.

    • @Cloudedmemory
      @Cloudedmemory 2 роки тому +2

      Why did I just sing this to the Sea Shanty tune...

  • @angela_merkeI
    @angela_merkeI 2 роки тому +15

    Yo, Lucian's "True stories" would be cool as an episode, imo. You'd had satire and intergalactic space battles whil also presenting those who haven't read it one of, if not the first, sience fiction novels.

  • @themysterfox8695
    @themysterfox8695 2 роки тому +2

    i just noticed the name of the coffee shop,and now i GOTTA go back to earlier episodes to see if they change

  • @20332424
    @20332424 2 роки тому +7

    Cup of JoCasta is a classical level of pun

  • @ThatGUY666666
    @ThatGUY666666 2 роки тому +5

    So I take we have all learned a very valuable lesson here today, namely, if you ever hear about an oracle you immediately turn and run (do not walk) in the opposite direction. For the life of me I do not think I have heard of anybody who spoke with an oracle and it did not immediately spiral into tragedy.

  • @cavc94
    @cavc94 Рік тому +1

    This play is so good that even if you know the plot twist beforehand still thrills you.

  • @ThatFanBoyGuy
    @ThatFanBoyGuy 2 роки тому +1

    Good video! Can't wait to hear about the sequel Antigone!

  • @francissreckofabian01
    @francissreckofabian01 2 роки тому +2

    We did this for high school. In fact I we also did all the Theban plays. I had Antigone for English, Ancient History AND French. Talk about being handed success on a platter. Shame I failed all three subjects. Guess I dropped the platter, tripped over it and landed head first in the mud. And then the platter landed on my head.

  • @Ryu_D
    @Ryu_D 2 роки тому

    Thank you for the video.

  • @Rabbitearsblog
    @Rabbitearsblog 2 роки тому

    Awesome video! I need to reread this book again!

  • @osurpless
    @osurpless 2 роки тому +17

    When it comes to the "2nd place" absurdity, Stardom has one of my favorite quotes to give insight:
    "At the very first Nobel Prize for Literature, War and Peace came in 2nd. The first place went to a diminutive French poet named Sully Prudhomme. Now how many people have heard of Tolstoy? (all hands raise)
    Now how many people have heard of Sully Prudhomme? (fewer hands).
    Don't trust the experts. They don't know anything..."
    Too bad singular instances like this can be so readily misused by anti-intellectuals to support certain ex-Presidents as well as to automatically discount sources based on authority and the peer edited process...

    • @jon-paulfilkins7820
      @jon-paulfilkins7820 2 роки тому +3

      Even Charlie Chaplin came 2nd in a Charlie Chaplin look-a-like contest! ;)

    • @aidanconnor2274
      @aidanconnor2274 2 роки тому +1

      Elvis also lost his own Look-Alike challenge.

    • @UnreasonableOpinions
      @UnreasonableOpinions 2 роки тому +4

      One of the problems with judging recent work is that it hasn't had time to sit and be seen. The very best of media, especially performed work like theatre scripts, is because it is immensely rich in thematic weight, offers great scope for multiple readings and interpretations, and manages to connect to something not just evocative of the milieu in which it was written but the human experience more broadly. It takes time and the work of many critics to properly mine thematic depth, it takes more time and many attempts to find out if something is open for meaningful reworking, and it takes by definition at least one generational cycle to find out if a work touches just the zeitgeist or something deeper. Having to judge recent works for 'classic' status requires critics to judge the equivalent of the entire play by its first act.
      The Nobel for Literature doesn't apply to this so much, but it has the even harder problem of being a multi-media competition. Having to judge what is best across multiple genres is maddening. Hard enough deciding what the best play or poem or novel is, let alone deciding if the best poem is better than the best novel.

    • @RobinTheBot
      @RobinTheBot 2 роки тому +3

      The problem is not experts, it is ranking... Only time reveals greatness.
      It cannot be guessed, even if experts have better odds.

  • @hannahvasby-burnie2477
    @hannahvasby-burnie2477 2 роки тому +2

    This is so handy, I have an exam on this in a couple days! Although I would like to hear that analysis of Paddington 2 👀🐻

  • @ShufflesCards
    @ShufflesCards 2 роки тому

    Really glad this video was posted 2 days after my test on this

  • @franklinspanklin8539
    @franklinspanklin8539 2 роки тому

    Love your videos, please more more more!!!!

  • @jayisabluebird
    @jayisabluebird Рік тому +1

    Honestly I recommend reading this one. I read it in college and even knowing what happened it compelled me and made me reflect on a lot

  • @VampireSquirrel
    @VampireSquirrel 2 роки тому +5

    If Oedipus placed second, what placed first?

  • @zilloguy42
    @zilloguy42 2 роки тому +2

    I’d love to see some Euripides on this channel . One of the most influential Greek writers I remember from my college days.

  • @charlesdeleo4608
    @charlesdeleo4608 2 роки тому +2

    Honestly, I feel that this would be more appropriate as an episode of Extra Mythology, seeing as Oedipus was a figure from the age of heroes, and a peer or Herakles.

  • @ninnusridhar
    @ninnusridhar 2 роки тому +3

    I still think Tom Lehrers masterful song Oedipus Rex is the best summary of this story, but still loved the video.
    "There once lived a man named Oedipus Rex
    You may have heard about his odd complex
    His name appears in Freud's index
    Coz he LOVED his mother"

  • @chelseabangs9657
    @chelseabangs9657 2 роки тому +2

    The prophet kitty needs to be a plushy, preferably in the pointing pose at the 3:43 mark.

  • @sofiagarcia1694
    @sofiagarcia1694 Рік тому +3

    "From the Bible to the popular song, There's one theme that we find right along. Of all ideals they hail as good, The most sublime is motherhood-

    • @MovieFan1912
      @MovieFan1912 Рік тому

      🎶There was a man, though, who it seems, once carried this ideal to extremes. He loved his mother and she loved him, and yet his story…is rather grim.🎶

  • @herbertgearing1702
    @herbertgearing1702 Рік тому +2

    I have frequently used the main characters name in situations where I needed to avoid colorful language. I assumed many people would not get the reference and those who do generally enter into fascinating conversations afterwards.

  • @The-Plaguefellow
    @The-Plaguefellow 2 роки тому +2

    0:18
    "With a beautiful wife..."
    For just a second, I thought y'all were gonna launch into a Talking Heads reference with how the cadence of that sentence worked out.

  • @vazak11
    @vazak11 Рік тому

    Good stuff!

  • @tpaktop2_1na
    @tpaktop2_1na 2 роки тому +2

    I recall reading that for Greek plays, it took two years of development of humor in their plays.

  • @shaider1982
    @shaider1982 2 роки тому +3

    I read this in summarized form in Edith Hamilton's book, Mythology. The book includes not only greek and roman myths but also Norse mythology.

  • @RyuuKageDesu
    @RyuuKageDesu 2 роки тому +1

    I will throw out there that I was a little said that Ibn Battuta didn't pop up with the detour sign.

  • @romanian8856
    @romanian8856 2 роки тому +3

    Can't wait for The Divine Comedy

    • @MovieFan1912
      @MovieFan1912 2 роки тому

      Oh, you know about Signore Alighieri’s magnum opus too?

  • @Palladiosios
    @Palladiosios 2 роки тому

    I am reading it right now so see you in two weeks when I’m finished

  • @t.c.oneill4576
    @t.c.oneill4576 2 роки тому

    dang, now this is how you do it!

  • @AmitsBanana
    @AmitsBanana 2 роки тому +2

    So do we know what play took first place over this one?

  • @danielroy8232
    @danielroy8232 9 місяців тому +1

    A minor correction to this video: at 4:04 the narrator claims that the location of Laius's death was prophecised for a specific location. In the translation and performance I know, the location of his death was not in the prophecy.

  • @joshuawells835
    @joshuawells835 2 роки тому +1

    I remember reading this sophomore year of high school. Now, I have graduated from college with a minor in Classics (though with more of an interest in the Romans than the Greeks)

  • @thebigbingus8624
    @thebigbingus8624 6 місяців тому +1

    “It is Greek tradition for a story to unfold at a single time and place, uninterrupted. It is more clear.” -Kratos

  • @RocketHarry865
    @RocketHarry865 Рік тому +2

    And this could have been avoided if Oedipus kept his cool decided to ask is adoptive parents from Cornith about the truth of his origins following hearing the accusations of not being their true born son, instead of going to the oracle of Delphi

    • @allye4228
      @allye4228 5 місяців тому

      In a version I heard, Oedipus asked his adopted father about it but he told Oedipus to ignore it.

  • @Its_just_Avi
    @Its_just_Avi 2 роки тому +4

    😊😊😊😀📚If possible,could you please also make a series to give a brief introduction or overview of non-fiction and self-help books📚📚📚

  • @TheCreepypro
    @TheCreepypro 2 роки тому

    nice I thought I had read this but I don't think I have because I have never heard it told like this I better make sure by picking it up now

  • @Lomecron
    @Lomecron 2 роки тому +1

    I'm sorry. I'm going to need the complete intertextual analysis of Oedipus the King's juxtaposition of Paddington 2.

  • @mickerzmouse
    @mickerzmouse Рік тому +1

    I do miss extra mythology! it was so good!

  • @whatgamesweplay
    @whatgamesweplay 2 роки тому +3

    we had him in highschool, but I think the teacher skipped the more difficult parts

  • @phantom_matchstick3809
    @phantom_matchstick3809 2 роки тому +1

    Can you do the giver, I read it a while ago and I want people to see this interesting book

  • @CC-wv1ny
    @CC-wv1ny 2 роки тому

    Love it

  • @Craby-YT
    @Craby-YT 2 роки тому

    I had to read this during high school

  • @kairinase
    @kairinase 8 місяців тому

    Somehow, this play also influenced P.Ramlee's "Ibu Mertuaku"... A tragedy about a musician that gouged his own eyes at the end!

  • @duckmaster5512
    @duckmaster5512 2 роки тому

    I haven’t seen paddington 2 but I saw the first one and read the book

  • @Chad_Milk
    @Chad_Milk 2 роки тому

    I like the artstyle

  • @richmanifesto1090
    @richmanifesto1090 2 роки тому +1

    Oeddies parents never heard the concept of no body = not dead

  • @Googledeservestodie
    @Googledeservestodie 2 роки тому +1

    STACY'S MOM HAS GOT IT GOING ON

  • @AidanRatnage
    @AidanRatnage 2 роки тому

    Extra film series soon?

  • @baliyae
    @baliyae 2 роки тому

    I read the sequel, “Antigone,” in high school.

  • @ThatFreakingGinger
    @ThatFreakingGinger 2 роки тому +1

    Do "An Inspector Calls"

  • @ng855
    @ng855 2 роки тому

    Always nice to know my tragedies pale in comparison to oedipus the king

  • @excellent808
    @excellent808 2 роки тому

    I had to read oedipus and antigone for highschool

  • @lemontiger6557
    @lemontiger6557 2 роки тому

    Yo can you do history about the tell tale heart?

  • @RichardLightburn
    @RichardLightburn 2 роки тому +4

    I very much enjoy Sophocles and O. the K., but I'm suspicious of Aristotle.
    A. never got anything right, including drama. Of the handful of Greek plays that we still have, his theory of tragedy fits only one really well, a few others somewhat, and most of the others not at all. And then there's the fact that of the dozen or so ancient drama writers, we have only three with surviving plays and of the hundreds of plays that even these three wrote, only 5% survive.
    Given these stats, I think A.'s claim for a theory of tragedy is pretty flimsy. If he's still influential, I think that's a medieval hangover.

  • @AudieHolland
    @AudieHolland Рік тому

    We can still see the remains of Classical Greek Tragedy in
    soap operas' season finales

  • @postapocalypticnewsradio
    @postapocalypticnewsradio 2 роки тому +1

    PANR has tuned in.

  • @Brandonhayhew
    @Brandonhayhew 2 роки тому +3

    Does anyone know Chris Chan

  • @jovanweismiller7114
    @jovanweismiller7114 2 роки тому

    I've never read it, so I just bought it on Kindle whilst watching this video.

  • @dr.anastasiabaratheon1146
    @dr.anastasiabaratheon1146 2 роки тому +4

    Just gonna pop in here early

  • @angrymanwithsillymoustasche
    @angrymanwithsillymoustasche 2 роки тому

    Do a video on Electra complex

  • @Stejers
    @Stejers 2 роки тому +1

    Its really weird that on the same day this video came out my history teacher told us to read oedipus king

    • @Stejers
      @Stejers 2 роки тому

      now that I am rewatching this video got this question, was it on purpose the text in the thumbnail? cause oedipus complex is what is called people who romanticaly love their mother. I dunno if they wanted to do a joke with that but.. idk i just find it weird

  • @joeblaster8770
    @joeblaster8770 2 роки тому +1

    This has a big impact on the Dune saga.

  • @286michealjoseph6
    @286michealjoseph6 2 роки тому

    Please do a video on “The Brothers Karamazov” or other Dostoevsky’s books👌🙂

  • @espio87
    @espio87 2 роки тому

    The version I read of the play claimed that Oedipus gouged his eyes because in the end we're always blind to Fate.

  • @kdot4068
    @kdot4068 2 роки тому +1

    Troll: EY! I just BOINKED yer MUM!
    Oedipus: Yeh, same.

  • @BergmitetheBlueandPointy0712
    @BergmitetheBlueandPointy0712 2 роки тому

    Didn’t know an Alolan trial captain write such a literature.

  • @ancientgreek2022
    @ancientgreek2022 Рік тому

    gratias tibi!

  • @ad0re.h3r
    @ad0re.h3r 2 роки тому +1

    this would have been great 3 weeks ago 😭

  • @KevinTorres_k3v1ntrs
    @KevinTorres_k3v1ntrs 2 роки тому

    Is that Paddington joke a reference to the Nick Cage movie?

  • @RandomAFP
    @RandomAFP 2 роки тому

    There was a pretty good lockdown performance of this with Oscar Isaac

  • @atrijaghosh7418
    @atrijaghosh7418 2 роки тому

    Idk if someone from West Bengal, India is watching it..but if you're watching it please give a listen to Sambhu Mitra's version of Raja Oedipus (King Oedipus!)

  • @clintsherman190
    @clintsherman190 2 роки тому

    Digging that you went with the "tragedy masks" from the Guthrie production...
    "RRAAAWRRRR! RRAAAWRRR! RRAAAWRRRR!!!!"

  • @paullenoue8173
    @paullenoue8173 2 роки тому +1

    Do we know who won first place?