Tuesday, September 29, 2009

Immortality

People in today's society are trying to make things or supplements to make them live longer. People are trying to be healthy by eating healthy, exercising, taking different kinds of supplements and so on. But none of those things will make you live forever. There is no way possible for somebody to live forever. Death is natural and its going to happen.

YOUTUBE Quest to Immortality:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XfTqXL0d9Ls


*The Quest For Immortality ( 60 Minutes )

(http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2005/12/28/60minutes/main1168852_page2.shtml?tag=contentMain;contentBody)

Want To Live 500 Years? One Scientist Says It May Be Possible One Day

De Grey has identified the biological processes he thinks are responsible for aging, including the mutations that cause cancer and the gradual buildup of useless, toxic junk.

What does this accumulation of junk within the cells lead to?

"It depends on the tissue. In the eye, there is a type of junk that accumulates in the back of the retina that eventually causes us to go blind. It's called age-related macular degeneration. In the arteries, you have a different type of cell which accumulates a different type of junk that eventually causes arteriosclerosis," he says.
But de Grey has gone way beyond describing the causes of degeneration. In a series of papers he has developed a theory he calls "Engineered Negligible Senescence". Simply put, it says science will soon enable us to grow old without aging.
De Grey says that not all of the conditions that cause our bodies to age can be avoided or prevented…yet. "But I do claim that we have a fighting chance of developing ways to prevent them within the next 25 years or so."
So humans will be just as spry at 500 as we were at 25?
"If you have difficultly imaging this, think about the situation with houses. With moderate maintenance they stay up, they stay intact, inhabitable more or less forever. It’s just that we have to do a bit of maintenance to keep them going. And it's going to be the same with us," says de Grey.
But realistically, who wants to live to age 500 or 1,000?
"What I'm after is not living to 1,000. I'm after letting people avoid death for as long as they want to," he says.

Monday, September 28, 2009

Ignorance vs. Guilt

Question:If a person does not know, is that person still guilty of grievous crime?Consider the plight of Oedipus and a modern day example.What would you do if you were on the jury at the Oedipus trial?What would you do if you were on the jury in a modern day trial?What would cause you to vote one way or another? Values? Beliefs? Evidence? Society Norms? Other information?


If a person doesn't know that law and did something wrong, yes of course they should still be guilty. If someone doesn't know the law and they have done wrong there is no excuse. In the book, Oedipus commited a crime by killing his father. He didn't know that it was his father, but he still commited a crime. It was still murder and he punished himself by leaving the country. If i was at his trial i would agree with his decision completly. If you killed someone, but you said it was by accident or something there is no excuse. Murder is murder and you cant bring that person back.
Like in todays time if i were in a trail and lets say someone shot somebody using self defense, it would still be a crime and you would still have to suffer the punishment. Even if you do say, it was an accident and it was just for self defense its not right just to start shooting and killing people, but on the other hand if someone was trying to kill you of course you would try and defend yourself. So its hard to know whats right and whats wrong but laws are laws and you need to obey them. Oedipus had no idea that that was his father and that he was sleeping with his mother, but even if he did do it unknowingly, he still commited the crime and i think what he did was the right choice by banishing himself from the country.
So whether you think one side it the right side, the laws are the laws and they still have to be followed and respected!

Sunday, September 27, 2009

Despair in the Theban Plays- GRADE

What is the meaning of "Despair" and how does this theme manifest itself in both plays?

Despair means someone or something that causes hopelessness; loss of hope; to lose, or give up.
The first sign of despair is when the people come to Oedipus about the plague and he can do nothing about it. He sees the people dying and miserable and doesn't know what he can do to help out his people. Another example is when Teiresias came and told Oedipus that he was acutally the cause of the plague. Right then the people probably lost a lot of hope because how is Oedipus suppose to stop the plague when he is acutally the cause of it all. Jocasta then explains how when Liaus and Jocasta had their first kid the oracle was given to them saying that the child would kill the father and marry the mother. So hearing that they gave the baby to a shepard who was to kill him. But the shepherd didn't feel quite right killing a helpless baby so he gave him to another shepherd, who then gave him to the king and queen or Corinth to be raised as a prince. A messenger later came upon Oedipus and told him that they weren't his real parents and that his parents were dead. Jocasta then became very estatic because she knew that the oracle couldn't come true, so that the plague wasn't Oedipus's fault. But the messenger then tells Oedpius that those aren't his real parents. " Messenger: I am not your father, neither is Polybus. Oedipus: How comes it then that I was called his son? Messenger: I will tell you. You were given to him - by me. Oedipus: Given? And yet he loved me as his son? Messenger: He had no other." (53-54). And with all this going on, Jocasta hung herself in her room because she can't believe all that is going on. Then Oedipus comes in and finds her hung he then gets broaches from her clothes and scratches her eyes out.

In Antigone, she is in despair because going to get murdered for what she believes in. Her two brothers Eteocles and Polynices got into a huge fight because Polynices was trying to take over the city and Eteocles was trying to defend it. They both killed eachother and Creon gave Eteocles and proper burial because he was trying to defend the city. But he just left Polynices to lay out and rot and get fed to the birds. Creon made a law that anyone who tried to bury Polynices would be punished with death. Antigone knew that there was no way she was getting her brothers back and no way that they could ever be replaced. Her love for her brothers and knowing they were her only ones made her up mind that she was going to go against Creon's law and bury Polynices. Antigone's sister, Ismene, the only family member remaining told Antigone that she would help her but she didn't want to get caught and face the punishment. Antigone got caught burying Polynices. King Creon told her to admit what she did and she told him that what she did was for the love of her brother and everyone, no matter who or what they did deserves to have a proper burial. Also, Haemon is in despair because he heard what Antigone did and went to talk to Creon. He talked to Creon about marrying Antigone but Creon told him never, my son is not going to marry a traitor. He got very angry with his father because the people of the city believed her actions was the right thing to do. Creon doesn't like that Haemon is going against him so Creon tells Haemon that he is going to murder Antigone and he is going to make him watch every part of it. Haemon refuses to see his love get killed so he runs away. Creon puts Antigone in a cave for her punishment. Then later on the messenger came to Creon and told him that Antigone has hung herself. Once Haemon heard about that he then stabbed himself to death. Then when Haemon's mother hears of his death, she leaves to kill herself because of the greif of her son. Creon is in a lot of despair because he lost his son and his wife. But since he is the almighty king all of his actions are right.

Conscientious Objection

What is "conscientious objection"?In what ways does Antigone demonstrate conscientious objection?In your opinion, did she do the right thing? Explain your view in terms of how 21st Century citizens might view her actions.

Conscientious Objection is when someone refuses to do anything that is based on a law, and they do what they think is right based on their religous beliefs and their morals. In the book Antigone, Antigone shows this by not obeying the rule that Creon has made. Anitgone refuses that her brother get eaten by birds and not get a proper burial, even though he did try to destroy Thebes. She didn't think it was fair that her other brother got a proper burial and her one didn't. She knew that these were her brothers and they had to go down in the earth the right way, knowing that she would most likey get killed but she didn't care. She would rather get killed and get off of the earth than see her brother get eaten by birds.
I believe that she did the right thing. If my brothers died i would definitly want them to have a proper burial and to have their bodies in peace. Antigone stood up for what she believed in, knowing that she could get killed. That was a very strong thing for her to do, and it shows the love she has for her brothers and family. In todays society everyone gets a proper burial and a funeral. It doesn't matter who you are or what you did. Its the right thing to do. Thats all the Antigone wanted. Is to have her brother in peace and not to have his body set to rot and ate by birds. So I think that Antigone did the right thing because I know that is what I would do and probably what anyone else would do if they were in that situation.

Antigone

Ismene and Antigone are talking about what Creon has said, that if someone decides to bury their brother they will be killed. Creon became the king and Antigone's two brothers have died in battle. One had the proper burial but the other one is supposed to be left for the birds. Creon doesn't believe that he deserves the proper burial. Antigone then asks Ismene to help her bury him against Creon's orders. Ismene tells Antigone that even though she will love both her brother and her sister, she can not give up her life for the burial of her brother. Antigone tells her that pride is more important but Ismene refuses. Creon enters and tells the people that order has been restored into the Thebes and one of the brothers will be given a hero's burial while the other will go to the birds for he tried to take down Thebes. A guard enters and tells Creon that someone has tried to bury the brother and they have no idea who has disobeyed the king. Creon declares that the guard was paid to and the Chorus believes that the Gods did it. Creon believes that the Gods would not be traitors and sentences the guard to death if he cannot find the person who committed the crime. The Chorus sings about men and how they are very powerful but they need to follow the lead of the Gods because they are the ones with the real power. Later the guard comes back with Antigone. They call Creon and tell him that Antigone is the person who illegally buried the brother. When they were uncovering the body a dust storm came up and they could not see anymore. When it cleared they saw Antigone trying to bury the body again. The guards took her at once and when Creon asks her if she denies it she does not. He asks her if she knew of the law forbidding it and she says she did but that was not going to stop her from burring her own brother. Creon brings in Ismene and tells them they will both be put to death. Antigone tells Creon that being put to death to save her brother will give her great joy! Antigone tells Creon that she acted by herself and that she is the only one that should be put death. Creon doesn't believe her and orders them to be ties up and taken away. Once again the Chorus sings of the death that has come upon the house of Oedipus and they hope it will be saved this time. Haemon comes in and talks to Creon. He tells him that the town has said Antigone should not die for trying to do a good deed for her brother. Creon is angered that the village is telling him how to rule. Haemon believes that Creon is a stubborn man. Creon becomes mad and Haemon tells Creon that the death of Antigone might cause the death of others. Creon wants Antigone to be brought out and killed in front of Haemon. Finally after a while of thinking Creon decides not to kill Ismene and put Antigone alive in a cave for her life. The Chorus talks about how love will cause a man to be driven insane. When Antigone comes back in the Chorus believes that her death will only be because of the pride not because she is noble. She is very angry and as the guards are leading her away to her cave she tells Creon that she is only doing this because a sibling cannot be replaced. She cries out that Thebes is ruled by nothing but cowards and she is glad to be gone. Later when Tiresias comes in Creon swears to follow all directions he has. He tells Creon that because he did not bury the brother and is now going to put Antigone to death the Gods are putting a curse on all of Thebes. Creon does not agree with the prophet at first but then decides to let Antigone free but it is too late. She has hung herself and when Haemon sees her dead he stabs himself. When Haemon's mother hears of what has happened she is devastated and leaves to kill herself because of the grief of her son. The messenger tells Creon that his wife cursed him for his own stupidity. Creon asks to be killed and he is taken into the palace. The Chorus sings one last time of how if one is too proud the Gods will find a way to bring him down.

quotes.
My own flesh and blood—dear sister, dear Ismene, how many griefs our father Oedipus handed down! Do you know one, I ask you, one grief that Zeus will not perfect for the two of us while we still live and breathe? There’s nothing, no pain—our lives are pain—no private shame, no public disgrace, nothing I haven’t seen in your grief and mine. (Antigone, 1–8)

Anarchy—show me a greater crime in all the earth! She, she destroys cities, rips up houses, breaks the ranks of spearmen into headlong rout. But the ones who last it out, the great mass of them owe their lives to discipline. Therefore we must defend the men who live by law, never let some woman triumph over us. Better to fall from power, if fall we must, at the hands of a man—never be rated inferior to a woman, never. (Antigone, 751–761)

King Oedipus

Oedipus is greeted by many priests, who is also surrounded by the citizens of Thebes. The city of Thebes has been struck by a plague and many people are dying and nobody knows how to stop it or how to cure it. Oedipus asks the preist why everyone is at the palace and he says that the people come to the palace to ask the king to save Thebes. Odepius sees how bad the town is and how many people are dying so he sends his brother-in-law, Creon, to Delphic orcale to see if he knows how to stop the plague. Just then, Creon comes back and Oedipus asks what oracle has told him. Creon asked if he wanted to hear it in private but Oedipus says that he wants all of the poeple to hear the news. He found out the the murderer of Laius, who once ruled Thebes before Oedipus did, is back in Thebes and he must be run out for the plague to come to an end. Creon then tells them of the past story of Laius's murder. How they were on their way to talk to an oracle, Laius and all of his men were all killed but one. Oedipus asks if anyone knew who the murderers were and why no Thebans tried to find them. Creon tells him that the people were more afraid with the curse of the Sphinx. Oedipus gets very angry and tells the Chorus that he will end the plague himself. He asks the people if anyone, just anyone knows who killed Laius, giving a reward to anyone that informs him about the murderer and will recieve no furter punishment but will have to leave the country. No one says anything and right then Oedipus goes out on an uproar and swears Laius's murderer and anyone who is trying to protect him. Oedipus curses himself saything that he should discover the murderer to be an own family member. Even it is one of his family members, they would still suffer the same punishment. The Chorus then calls for the great prophet, Tiresia, but Oeidpus says that he has already called for him. When Tiresias arrives Oedipus begs him to reveal who killed Laius, but he answers only that he knows who the murderer is, but he'd we he didn't. Oedipus isn't sure what to say, but then gets very angry and insists that Tiresias tell the town of Thebes what he knows. Tiresias gets affended by Oedipus's anger and when Oedipus calls Tiresias the murderer, Tiresias tells Oedipus that Oedipus is the curse, he is the one who killed Laius. He doesn't believe what he is hearing and soon he is furious and makes up a story that Creon and Tiresias are trying to overthrow him. The Chorus asks Oedipus to try and be calm but he can't when Tiresias keeps going on the Oedipus doesn't even know who his parents are. When he said that, he made Oedipus very furious but he also is wondering how true it actually is. Tiresias is saying that the killer will be the son and husband to his mother and the brother and father to his children. The Chorus is very confused and doesn't know what to think or who to believe so they won't believe anything until they are shown proof. Creon enters and Oedipus accuses Creon of trying to overthrow him since he had Tiresias come. Creon wants to talk it out but Oedipus wants Creon dead. Right then, Oedipus's wife, Jocasta comes and tells Oedipus that he shouldn't kill Creon. Jocasta tells him that all of the prophets are false. She tells him that the oracle said that their son was supposed to kill his father and marry his mother but the son was put to death and Laius was killed by thieves. All sounding very familar to Oedipus tells Jocasta that he might be the one who killed Laius. He told her that a very long time ago when he was prince of Corinth, he heard he wasn't the son the the king and queen so he went to the oracle of Delphi. The oracle didn't tell him anything but they did tell him he would kill his father and sleep with his mother. Getting told that he ran away from home and that led him to Thebes. He said that he was attacked by a group of travelers which he killed in his own defense, and it was at the very same place where Laius was murdered. Oedipus then sends for the shepherd who was the only surviving man of the attack. A messenger then comes looking for Oedipus. He tells Jocasta to tell Oedipus that his father, Polybus, is dead and the city of Corinth wants Oedpius to come and rule. They are glad to hear this because then they know that the prophecy is wrong. But Oedipus is worried that the part of the prophecy that said he would sleep with his mother. The messenger informs him not to worry because Polybus and his wife Merope are not actually Oedipus's actual parents. The messenger says that he used to be a shepherd long ago and one day found a baby on a mountain near Thebes. That baby was Oedipus. Oedipus wants to know who left him on the mountains and he says that it was another shepherd, one of Laius's servant who gave him baby Oedipus and was meaning to kill it. Oedipus wants to try and find this shepherd but Jocasta begs him to stop but he doesn't want to. He needs to find the shepherd. Oedipus comes upon the shepherb and asks who gave him the baby but the shepherd refuses to talk. Oedipus threatens him with tourture and then he finally answers that the baby came from the house of Laius. He says that it was Laius's child and Jocasta gave it to him to kill because of the prophecy saying that the child would kill his parents. But instead of killing the baby the shepherd gave him to another shepherd so that he could be raised as the prince of Corinth. After realizing who he acutally is and who is real parents are, he lets out a long scream. The messenger comes back and tells the chorus that he has more bad news. Jocasta has hung herself in her room. She has cried for Laius and for her bad fate. Oedipus walks into Jocasta's room and when he sees her hanging he takes her gold broaches from her clothes and repeatedly gouges out his eyes. Oedipus walks onto the stage and is covered in blood and moaning about his bad fate and the horrible life he has. He says he must be banished from Thebes at once for he cannot bear his life anymore. Creon comes in and agrees to banish him from the town only if the Gods agree with everything that has happened. He tells Creon that his sons will be fine and act like men but he asks for Creon to take care of his girls and if he could see them one more time. His daughters, Antigone and Ismene, come onto the stage crying and Oedipus prays that their life will be better than his. Creon takes the girls away and Oedipus is taken down from the throne. The chorus comes in and says that one of the greatest men has fallen and that means that all life is miserable and the only way to feel better is to die.

quotes.
Fear? What should a man fear? It’s all chance, chance rules our lives. Not a man on earth can see a day ahead, groping through the dark. Better to live at random, best we can. And as for this marriage with your mother—have no fear. Many a man before you, in his dreams, has shared his mother’s bed. Take such things for shadows, nothing at all— Live, Oedipus, as if there’s no tomorrow! (Oedipus the King, 1068–1078)

People of Thebes, my countrymen, look on Oedipus. He solved the famous riddle with his brilliance, he rose to power, a man beyond all power. Who could behold his greatness without envy? Now what a black sea of terror has overwhelmed him. Now as we keep our watch and wait the final day, count no man happy till he dies, free of pain at last. (Oedipus the King, 1678–1684)

Introduction

Sophocles lead a life of privilege but was devoted to the service of state. He died, "leaving Athens materially exhausted and spiritually wrecked by the physical and moral strains of the conflict."
Origins of drama stem from "not only the human instinct for narrative and impersonation, but also the instinct for the ritualistic expression and interpretation of the power of natural forces, the cycle of life and death, and the nexus of past, present, and future."nexus: a connection or series of connections linking two or more things.
Chorus will function as an actor and commentator; will personify and "sing" the leading themes in the play; will stand aloof from the more highly developed plot and action while still unifying and commenting on the drama; will literally dance across the stage; offers commentary on the struggles the primary characters encounter.
Dramatic Irony is when the people in the audience know whats going on but the people in the play do not. When the audience knows that he killed his father and married his mother, but no one in the play has any idea until they get told.

Characters

OEDIPUS
Oedipus is a man of swift action and great insight. At the opening of Oedipus the King, we see that these qualities make him an excellent ruler who anticipates his subjects’ needs. When the citizens of Thebes beg him to do something about the plague, for example, Oedipus is one step ahead of them—he has already sent Creon to the oracle at Delphi for advice. But later, we see that Oedipus’s habit of acting swiftly has a dangerous side. When he tells the story of killing the band of travelers who attempted to shove him off the three-way crossroads, Oedipus shows that he has the capacity to behave rashly.
At the beginning of Oedipus the King, Oedipus is hugely confident, and with good reason. He has saved Thebes from the curse of the Sphinx and become king virtually overnight. He proclaims his name proudly as though it were itself a healing charm: “Here I am myself— / you all know me, the world knows my fame: / I am Oedipus” (7–9). By the end of this tragedy, however, Oedipus’s name will have become a curse, so much so that, in Oedipus at Colonus, the Leader of the Chorus is terrified even to hear it and cries: “You, you’re that man?” (238).
Oedipus’s swiftness and confidence continue to the very end of Oedipus the King. We see him interrogate Creon, call for Tiresias, threaten to banish Tiresias and Creon, call for the servant who escaped the attack on Laius, call for the shepherd who brought him to Corinth, rush into the palace to stab out his own eyes, and then demand to be exiled. He is constantly in motion, seemingly trying to keep pace with his fate, even as it goes well beyond his reach. In Oedipus at Colonus, however, Oedipus seems to have begun to accept that much of his life is out of his control. He spends most of his time sitting rather than acting. Most poignant are lines 825–960, where Oedipus gropes blindly and helplessly as Creon takes his children from him. In order to get them back, Oedipus must rely wholly on Theseus.
Once he has given his trust to Theseus, Oedipus seems ready to find peace. At Colonus, he has at last forged a bond with someone, found a kind of home after many years of exile. The single most significant action in Oedipus at Colonus is Oedipus’s deliberate move offstage to die. The final scene of the play has the haste and drive of the beginning of Oedipus the King, but this haste, for Oedipus at least, is toward peace rather than horror.

ANTIGONE
Antigone is very much her father’s daughter, and she begins her play with the same swift decisiveness with which Oedipus began his. Within the first fifty lines, she is planning to defy Creon’s order and bury Polynices. Unlike her father, however, Antigone possesses a remarkable ability to remember the past. Whereas Oedipus defies Tiresias, the prophet who has helped him so many times, and whereas he seems almost to have forgotten his encounter with Laius at the three-way crossroads, Antigone begins her play by talking about the many griefs that her father handed down to his children. Because of her acute awareness of her own history, Antigone is much more dangerous than Oedipus, especially to Creon. Aware of the kind of fate her family has been allotted, Antigone feels she has nothing to lose. The thought of death at Creon’s hands that so terrifies Ismene does not even faze Antigone, who looks forward to the glory of dying for her brother. Yet even in her expression of this noble sentiment, we see the way in which Antigone continues to be haunted by the perversion that has destroyed her family. Speaking about being killed for burying Polynices, she says that she will lie with the one she loves, loved by him, and it is difficult not to hear at least the hint of sexual overtones, as though the self-destructive impulses of the Oedipus family always tend toward the incestuous.
Antigone draws attention to the difference between divine law and human law. More than any other character in the three plays, she casts serious doubt on Creon’s authority. When she points out that his edicts cannot override the will of the gods or the unshakable traditions of men, she places Creon’s edict against Polynices’ burial in a perspective that makes it seem shameful and ridiculous. Creon sees her words as merely a passionate, wild outburst, but he will ultimately be swayed by the words of Tiresias, which echo those of Antigone. It is important to note, however, that Antigone’s motivation for burying Polynices is more complicated than simply reverence for the dead or for tradition. She says that she would never have taken upon herself the responsibility of defying the edict for the sake of a husband or children, for husbands and children can be replaced; brothers, once the parents are dead, cannot. In Antigone we see a woman so in need of familial connection that she is desperate to maintain the connections she has even in death.

CREON
Creon spends more time onstage in these three plays than any other character except the Chorus. His presence is so constant and his words so crucial to many parts of the plays that he cannot be dismissed as simply the bureaucratic fool he sometimes seems to be. Rather, he represents the very real power of human law and of the human need for an orderly, stable society. When we first see Creon in Oedipus the King, Creon is shown to be separate from the citizens of Thebes. He tells Oedipus that he has brought news from the oracle and suggests that Oedipus hear it inside. Creon has the secretive, businesslike air of a politician, which stands in sharp contrast to Oedipus, who tells him to speak out in front of everybody. While Oedipus insists on hearing Creon’s news in public and builds his power as a political leader by espousing a rhetoric of openness, Creon is a master of manipulation. While Oedipus is intent on saying what he means and on hearing the truth—even when Jocasta begs and pleads with him not to—Creon is happy to dissemble and equivocate.
At lines 651–690, Creon argues that he has no desire to usurp Oedipus as king because he, Jocasta, and Oedipus rule the kingdom with equal power—Oedipus is merely the king in name. This argument may seem convincing, partly because at this moment in the play we are disposed to be sympathetic toward Creon, since Oedipus has just ordered Creon’s banishment. In response to Oedipus’s hotheaded foolishness, Creon sounds like the voice of reason. Only in the final scene of Oedipus the King, when Creon’s short lines demonstrate his eagerness to exile Oedipus and separate him from his children, do we see that the title of king is what Creon desires above all.
Creon is at his most dissembling in Oedipus at Colonus, where he once again needs something from Oedipus. His honey-tongued speeches to Oedipus and Theseus are made all the more ugly by his cowardly attempt to kidnap Antigone and Ismene. In Antigone, we at last see Creon comfortable in the place of power. Eteocles and Polynices, like their father, are dead, and Creon holds the same unquestioned supremacy that Oedipus once held. Of course, once Creon achieves the stability and power that he sought and Oedipus possessed, he begins to echo Oedipus’s mistakes. Creon denounces Tiresias, for example (1144–1180), obviously echoing Oedipus’s denunciation in Oedipus the King (366–507). And, of course, Creon’s penitent wailings in the final lines of Antigone echo those of Oedipus at the end of Oedipus the King. What can perhaps most be said most in favor of Creon is that in his final lines he also begins to sound like Antigone, waiting for whatever new disaster fate will bring him. He cries out that he is “nothing,” “no one,” but it is his suffering that makes him seem human in the end.

CHORUS
The Chorus reacts to events as they happen, generally in a predictable, though not consistent, way. It generally expresses a longing for calm and stability. For example, in Oedipus the King, it asks Oedipus not to banish Creon (725–733); fearing a curse, it attempts to send Oedipus out of Colonus in Oedipus at Colonus (242–251); and it questions the wisdom of Antigone’s actions in Antigone (909–962). In moments like these, the Chorus seeks to maintain the status quo, which is generally seen to be the wrong thing. The Chorus is not cowardly so much as nervous and complacent—above all, it hopes to prevent upheaval.
The Chorus is given the last word in each of the three Theban plays, and perhaps the best way of understanding the different ways in which the Chorus can work is to look at each of these three speeches briefly. At the end of Oedipus the King, the Chorus conflates the people of “Thebes” with the audience in the theater. The message of the play, delivered directly to that audience, is one of complete despair: “count no man happy till he dies, free of pain at last” (1684). Because the Chorus, and not one of the individual characters, delivers this message, the play ends by giving the audience a false sense of closure. That is, the Chorus makes it sound like Oedipus is dead, and their final line suggests there might be some relief. But the audience must immediately realize, of course, that Oedipus is not dead. He wanders, blind and miserable, somewhere outside of Thebes. The audience, like Oedipus, does not know what the future holds in store. The play’s ability to universalize, to make the audience feel implicated in the emotions of the Chorus as well as those of the protagonist, is what makes it a particularly harrowing tragedy, an archetypal story in Western culture.
The Chorus at the end of Oedipus at Colonus seems genuinely to express the thought that there is nothing left to say, because everything rests in the hands of the gods. As with Oedipus’s death, the Chorus expresses no great struggle here, only a willing resignation that makes the play seem hopeful—if ambivalently so—rather than despairing. Oedipus’s wandering has, it seems, done some good. The final chorus of Antigone, on the other hand, seems on the surface much more hopeful than either of the other two but is actually much more ominous and ambivalent. Antigone ends with a hope for knowledge—specifically the knowledge that comes out of suffering. This ending is quite different from the endings of the other two plays, from a mere truism about death or the fact that fate lies outside human control. The audience can agree with and believe in a statement like “Wisdom is by far the greatest part of joy,” and perhaps feel that Creon has learned from his suffering, like Antigone seemingly did at the beginning of the play.
While the Chorus may believe that people learn through suffering, Sophocles may have felt differently. Antigone represents the last events in a series begun by Oedipus the King, but it was written before either of the other two Oedipus plays. And in the two subsequent plays, we see very little evidence in Antigone that suffering teaches anyone anything except how to perpetuate it.

Thursday, September 24, 2009

Odyssey

Book 1: Odysseus was at war, but when the war stopped he tried to go. He couldn't go because the goddess Caylpso help him hostage because she loved him and wanted to be with him. His son Telemachus is depressed because he hasn't come home yet. His mom Penelope is a bachalorette because everyone thinks that O is dead. Suitors have invaided their house in hope to marry her and take over their land and be very wealthy. Athena comes to T's house and tells him that O isn't dead and that he should go out on an adventure and find him. Athena told Telemachus that he should first go to Pylos and then to Sparta and see what he finds out. If he finds his father alive he has to wait 1 more year but if he is dead then Telemachus has to return back to his house and marry his mom off to one of the waiting suitors. A suitor was singing about the war and after while Penelope couldn't take it anymore . Penelope is also the daughter of Learuis.
Book 11: Odysseus goes to the River of Ocean in the land of Coimmerians. There he performs a sacrifice like Circe told him to do so he can attract the souls of the dead. The first dead that appears is Elpenor, a crewman who fell off Circe's roof and broke his neck. Elpenor begs O to come back and give his body a proper burial. O talks to the Theban Prophet Tiresia who foretells O's fate that he will return home, reclaim his wife and palace from all of the suitors and then go make peace with Posidean. He warns O not to touch the flocks of sun when he reaches the land of Thrinacia or he won't return home without suffering hardship or losing all of his men.
Book 14: Nestor leaves the wounded Machaon in his tent and goes to meet the other wounded Achean commandors out by the ships. The men scan the battlefield and realizes the extent of their loses. Agamemnon proposes giving up and sailing home. O wheels on him and declares this notion cowardly and disgraceful. Diomedes urges them all to the line to rally their troops. As they set out, Poseidon encourages Agamemnon and gives strength to the Achaean army. Hera spots Zeus on Mt. Ida, overlooking Troy, and devises a plan to distract him so that she may help the Archaens behind his back. She visits Aphrodite and tricks her into giving her an enchanged breastband into which the powers of Love and Longing are woven, forceful enough to make the sanest man go mad. Then she visits Sleep and by promising him one of her daughters in the marriage, persuades him to lull Zues to sleep. Sleep then follows her to the peak.

T's Cycle
call to adventure: Athena says to go find your father
Helpers: Athena and Eurycleia
Threshold crossing: goes into his fathers house to stand up to the suitors.
tests: dealing with the suitors' insults; challenging the townspeople to support him
helpers: Athena
Triumph: search for his father, Father Quest
Threshold Crossing: crosses back over the seas to get to Ithaca

O's cycle
Call to adventure: Trojan war is over - O's heart calls him back home
Helpers: Other Greek Kings; Athena
Threshold crossing: Gets on ship to sail back to Ithaca but Posideon tries to stop him
Tests: what he all goes through in the flashbacks
Triumph: what he is going after = sacred marriage
Threshold crossing: Posideons last " hit " before O can be at home

NOTES/ POSTS

he suitors are mean and disrespectful. They don't care what other people feel about what they do. They don't have any feelings towards Penelope because all they want from this is the money and that marring her would bring them. Penelope still has strong feelings for Odyessues and has faith that he is still alive. Penelope is making a shawl for her father and when it is finished she has to marry, but every day she weaves and at the night she unweaves it all so it will never be finished. That shows right there that she only has true feelings for her husband and doesn't want anyone else. T is turning out to be a good guy and very wise. Athena told him that he is becoming better than his father already and usually the generations go down. T is also showing more growing up because he set out to go find his father. He finds out that there is acually a lot more that he can do to set out and find his father. So him and Athena set out from the group they were with to go find Odyessues.

Odyessues and Caylpso are stuck on an island together. During the day Odyssues has nothing to do but weep and want his dear Penelope and at night he is unwillingly laying next to Caylpso. Caylpso wants him to herself and wants him to say not because she is forcing him to but because he wants to, but she knows that that will never happen. Odyessues seems kind of like a traiter in some ways because he yearns so much for Penelope but sleeps with Caylpso. He doesn't do it willingly but if he cares so much about her then he should have respect for her. Penelope has all the suitors at her house throwing themselves at her but she doesn't do one thing with any of them, which shows how faithful she is to him. Odyssues does eventually get sent to return home, but unfortunalty he has to make that journey home by himself. When Poseidon sees him free and on his way home, he gets very very mad and creates a huge storm to try and slow him down and try to kill him. Odyssues escapes the storm and safely makes it to a rivermouth. Posiedon is probably the only god who doesn't think Odysseus has gotten enough punishment because he is the only one who still wants revenge on Odysseus.

Odysseus isn't a very good leader. He is a good leader for himself but not for others. When the Cyclops was sleeping, O and his men came up with an idea to escape from the cave. They sharpened a stick and put it in the burning coals, when the Cyclops awoke they gave him very good tasting wine. He kept wanting more and not long after he got drunk off of it and passed out on the ground. O and his men took the stick when it was hot and drilled it into the Cyclop's eye and blinded him. O and his men tied themselves to the bottom of the sheep so the Cyclops couldn't feel them. The Cyclops got mad and ate six of his men. Later he had his men go to check out the island of Circe and 20 of his men got turned into pigs. She turned them back into humans and let them stay there for 1 year.

O goes to the River of Ocean in the land of the Cimmerians. There he sacafices a ram like Circe told him to so he could attract the souls of the dead. The first dead he meets is Elpenor, a crewman who fell off Circes roof. Elpenor begs O to come back to the island and give his body a proper burial. O talks to Tiresias who foretells O's fate and says that he will return home, reclain his wife and palace from the suitors. Then he shall to make piece with Posideon. O is warned to not touch the flocks of sun when he reaches the land of Thrinacia or he will suffer hardship and will lose all of his men. O is becoming better at listening to the gods and what they tell him to do, but is also becoming more violent. He does what he wants to do but goes after what he needs.

Emmaeus is a very loyal man because O shows up at his house, disquised, and asked if he could stay there. E didn't know who it was at first and allows him to say. E then realized that it is O who has come. E only wants best for O and his family. O was always a very kind guy to E. O disqieses himself by lying so that word wouldn't get out about him being there because then the suitors would find out. E can always be trusted and seeing how O was very kind and loyal, E wants to be the same way.