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Oedipus Rex, Othello, And August Wilson's Fences

Decent Essays

Literature utilizes the readers’ need to connect with a character. More often than not, with authors making their characters relatable in one sense or another that could be transferred into multiple stories. This idea of relatability is the core of the tragic hero, a trope used often in literature including in stories such as Sophocles’ Oedipus Rex, Chinua Achebe’s Things Fall Apart, Shakespeare's Othello, and August Wilson’s Fences. Each from different years, authors, and genres, yet each utilizing the tragic hero to further their individual themes through depicting the greatness of a godlike man and his fall to lowest points within humanity.
The tragic hero often begins far above his peer’s heads, at times even accomplishing godlike status, other times it is simply a greatness unachievable by the others around them. Oedipus is easily the most distinguishable in his greatness, regarded as “Oedipus the Great,” by himself, but also others. Thebes regards Oedipus with the same respect the gods demand for themselves. Similarly, Okonkwo of Things Fall apart is quickly established as a strong male in his community, citing that “although Okonkwo was still young,” he was already awarded with the status of one of the“greatest men of his time” within his tribe. This godlike status achieved by tragic heroes in their respective environments is essentially what most stories aim to provide readers with in their protagonist. In narratives it is essential for a character to establish a

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