Tuesday, January 28, 2014

Oedipus Rex Reflection

I was honestly very stressed during the whole reading of Oedipus Rex. It is just so frustrating to watch someone as they bring their own downfall whilst not knowing, and while still being prideful. Oedipus basically makes every choice for himself with no outside guidance, all together leading to him stabbing his own eyes out in his tragic hero cycle.
In class today, we watched chunks of Titanic which was just as sad. The captain was the tragic hero in this movie because his decisions of getting to the port a day early  fogged up his eye for safety. He decided to turn the 4th burner on, which in new ships is rather dangerous. He then didn't want to slow down when the iceberg was spotted because of his ignorance, which altogether caused the death of 1,500 people. This example of cause and effect is a key point in both Titanic and Oedipus Rex.

Thursday, January 16, 2014

Oedipus Rex Inventory


Sophocles- This man was born in Colonus, which was a village outside Athens. We was well educated because of being born into a wealthy armor maker's family. He was handsome, very athletic, and had great skill in music. He lived from 496 BCE- 406 BCE. This is the man that wrote the tragedy Oedipus Rex.


Oedipus Rex- An Athenian tragedy written by Sophocles. The main story line is that Oedipus Rex (main character) has a prophecy that he will kill his father and marry his mother. This does happen by the end and is a tragedy because of it.

Oedipus the Man- A very nice man, although fictional, he had quite the look on life. As a child he was given to strangers because his prophecy was that he would marry his mother and kill his father. His parents were the king and queen, so they didn't want that to happen because incest is frowned upon.


Aristotle- a Greek philosopher born n Stagirus in 384 BCE. He lived under guardian care because hi dad died when he was a child. When he was 18 he joined Plato's Academy and remained there until he was 37. Aristotle is titled the first genuine scientist because of his massive collection of writings on physics, metaphysics, theater, politics, government, biology, and zoology. He was also a huge fan of Sophocles and his works.
 
Aristotle tragedy- Aristotle really loved Oedipus Rex and considered it the perfect tragedy. He analyzed it thoroughly and decided it is the "imitation of an action" by a tragedy "showing" rather than "telling" through action instead of narrative that makes a play a tragedy.


Dramatic Irony- This effect is achieved by leading an audience to understand what is happening (normally a bad thing), while the characters in the play are unaware of what is happening. In the picture above you can see the prisoner is going to dig straight into a restroom sewage system. The prisoner doesn't have any idea this will happen, but we do. In Oedipus Rex this happens when Oedipus kills his father, marries his mother, then goes looking for the killer of his father so he can avenge his new wife.


Tiresias- this is the man who game Oedipus his prophecy to kill his dad and marry his mom. He was a blind prophet of Thebes, most famous for hitting two snakes with a stick and getting turned into a women for 7 years. Once Oedipus marries his mother, he goes back to Tiresias and tells him to tell him the name of the murderer, but Tiresias says there is no point since the truth will eventually show its self.


Fate- a power believed to control what happens in the future. It is also the things someone cannot get away from no matter how hard they try; they can't ever get away from their fate. This the the prophecy that Oedipus gets. No matter how many times he gets thrown away or runs away, he eventually will kill his dad and marry his mom.

Oedipus and the Sphinx, ca. 1806-1808 François Xavier Fabre
Oedipus Rex Myth- The myth is that Oedipus saved his city once he killed his father and then figuring out the riddle the sphinx has put out so he will stop terrorizing the city. Because he figured out the riddle he got the throne of Thebes and the recently widowed queen, who is also his mother, thus competing his prophecy. Oedipus represents the flawed nature of humanity and an individuals role in the course of destiny in a harsh universe.


Aristotle Hubris- extreme pride and arrogance shown by a character that ultimately brings about his own downfall. Definition of Hubris by Aristotle: "Hubris consists in doing and saying hings that cause the victim shame... simply for the pleasure of it. Retaliation is not hubris, but revenge... Young men and the rich are hubristic because they think they are better then other people" (Aristotle's Rhetoric).


Greek Theater- these were where all plays and many performances took place. A lot of the time people would party and eat for a few days straight, then go see a play or tragedy in one of these. In almost all plays they would have hundreds of masks that would show personality instead of appearance most of the time.

Monday, January 13, 2014

We Forget The End Is The Begining

Baraka is the kind of film in which one falls asleep at the end; not because they are tired: but because in dreams, one can imagine a perfect world.



Baraka is a movie with no dialect, only has pictures/video, and music in the background. Baraka is quite an amazing movie because of all the diverse photography that was taken, not to mention "Baraka" means "essence" or "breath". It was photographed on six continents and in 24 countries. It has everything from gorgeous mountains, sacred religious acts, to bustling city life. It makes me wonder which is more important: compassion to all living things, or acting as an ant moving through the colony with no meaning at all. Baraka makes city life look like an ant hill where everyone is moving so fast that they only care about themselves and how much money they will make tomorrow. There is so much else in the world, and this movie covers it all.

This film evokes so much compassion and wonderment from the audience. It even relates to my last semester through how real it is. It isn't saying we have done anything wrong as humans, it simply states "here it is, this is what it looks like". After the movie we read a small essay by Mary Ann Brussat where she stated some of the images in which her and her husband were really moved. I think she could have also found the gulf war very awing. It was amazing because when I looked at the video of the gulf after the war, the first thing that shot to my mind was "nobody wins wars" because of the devastation of that area now. Brussat really thought the religious aspect of the video was the most moving. I actually completely agree with her and her choice of the most amazing part. My favorite out of all the religious things was the circle song/dance that all the boys and men did as a ritual. This movement around the circle really made me think "family". The music was quite intense and irrational, making the dance even cooler. I really love the complete cycle this movie presents from beginning to end.



Baraka was all around a very heart warming movie because of all the passion people put into rituals. Sure there are parts that make me cringe (the duck scene), but that's not what the video is trying to show. Even just the music in Baraka sets a mood. Through mood we derive meaning, and the silences between the music are as vital and meaningful as the music itself. Back in first semester we went over "the machine" and everything turning to factory output. This has a direct correlation where extremely crowded subways and streets are shown, followed by little chicks being processed in their thousands. "The machine" is us, and our lives are being isolated from nature.