Sunday, August 4, 2019
Foreshadowing in Oedipus the King and The Marriage of Figaro :: comparison compare contrast essays
Foreshadowing in Oedipus the King and The Marriage of Figaro     Ã     Ã  Ã   `You are the curse, the  corruption of the land!'.Ã   With these words,     Tiresias, a blind prophet in `Oedipus The King' set the actions in play     that would turn king to beggar within the day.Ã   Prophecy and  foreshadowing     is an important part of playwriting, and adds an element of suspense that     is not possible any other way.Ã   Whether it be the witches of MacBeth,  the     ramblings of Tiresias in Oedipus the King, and Antigone, or whether it is     the unrealized foreshadowing by Figaro in `The Marriage of Figaro',     foreshadowing gives the reader or the audience something to puzzle     themselves over, until the play or novel is actually over.Ã   It would not  be     a stretch of the imagination to say that some of the greatest plays ever     written would be impotent if their elements of foreshadowing was removed.     Ã       Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã   Foreshadowing is defined, in Webster's  dictionary, as `to give a     hint or suggestion of beforehand'.Ã   In drama, foreshadowing is  generally     used for several purposes, including the creation of tension, creation of     atmosphere, and adds an element of credibility to a character.Ã   All  of     these are important elements of a play.Ã   However it is not hard to  imagine     a play in which more then half of the elements of a plot, namely  exposition,     discovery, point of attack, complication and crisis all be caused by an  act     of foreshadowing or prophecy.Ã   Indeed, "Oedipus the King", which was     considered the greatest play in history by Aristotle, was one such play.     Ã       Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã   "Oedipus the King" was the story  of the King of Thebes, Oedipus,     and his dark past history which no one, including himself to a point, was     aware of, one that involved abandonment, patricide and incest.Ã   Thebes  was     beset by a plague, and a delegation was sent to Apollo, the Greek God of     healing, where they received instructions to find the murderer of the     previous king of Thebes, King Laius.Ã   This form of foreshadowing was     necessary for the storyline to have a starting place, and acts not only  as     foreshadowing, but also as discovery, because it gave new information  that     moved the plot forwards.Ã   A problem with this is the fact that it  requires     an act of God, something that Aristotle frowned upon in his definitive  text     					    
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