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Published byDelphia Hoover Modified over 9 years ago
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Attributes of a Tragic Hero from Ars Poetica By Aristotle
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Royal Birth Born into a royal family or class How did Oedipus have “royal birth?”
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Achieves Great Heights The tragic hero achieves something that sets him above even other royals. What feat established this for Oedipus? How did he achieve “great heights?”
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Tragic Flaw The Greeks called it “hamartia”--missing the mark Perfectly human, forgivable shortcoming A character flaw, not an act or event Ambition, dishonesty, jealousy
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Hubris The specific “hamartia” of the tragic hero had to be hubris The sin of unrelenting pride Conceit Arrogance Thinking you cannot be touched by the gods, fate, punishment, etc
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Evidence of Oedipus’ Hubris Thought he could avoid the prophecy by leaving Corinth Killed the old man to get his own way Assumed Tiresias was lying Ignored Jocasta’s and the shepherd’s advice to stop looking for the truth
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The Fall The Hero, who reached such great heights, loses EVERYTHING Family, fortune, respect
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What did Oedipus lose?
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Tragic Vision He comes to see and admit his shortcoming. How do we know that Oedipus sees his flawed character?
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Reversal The key to true Heroism
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The Tragic Hero changes his life Becomes a humble man Willing to submit to the will of the gods. Give evidence of Oedipus' reversal.
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