LG 5.2 Oedipus Rex 1
LG 5.2 Oedipus Rex 1
LG 5.2 Oedipus Rex 1
Hook
Task 1. Your Highness. Write five related words or things that you can
associate with the crown.
2
mins.
2. Can you associate the words you thought of with King Oedipus? Why
or why not?
Ignite At this point, you should have read Oedipus Rex. Unlocking some unfamiliar
words can help you better understand the text.
Task 1. Mystery Words. Using context clues, choose the best definition of the
underlined word. Encircle the letter of your answer. 13
(5 points) mins.
1. Some see the graffiti as the defilement of property while others look at the
airbrushed words as an expression of art.
A. purification C. packaging
B. pollution D. perdition
2. The job of the government is to eliminate the problems which vex our
country.
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A. target C. strain
B. trouble D. dominate
3. By nature, Sheila is a taciturn woman who keeps her thoughts to herself.
A. occupied C. reserved
B. respected D. exhorted
4. The judge adjured the witnesses to speak only the truth while testifying in
favor of the defendant.
A. requested C. questioned
B. commanded D. allowed
5. Many people believe that there should be a crackdown on those who flout
the welfare system.
A. simultaneously work C. sequentially arrange
B. consciously invoke D. intentionally disobey
Author’s Background
Sophocles (c. 496 - c. 406 BCE), one of classical Athens’ three great tragic
playwrights and poet, was born at Colonus in Attica. He is well-known for his
several major and minor dramatic innovations such as the introduction of a third
actor into the dramatic performance, the invention of pictorial prop or scene
painting to establish the locale, the introduction of a single play with three unities
of time, place and action, the increase size of the chorus from 12 to 15 members,
and the abandonment of trilogy. He wrote and produced around 120 plays
including Antigone, Women of Trachis, Oedipus at Colonus, Philoctetes, Ajax,
Electra, and greatest play, Oedipus the King (Britannica).
This tragic play represents a Sophoclean hero who takes his own route to
do what is right and to protect his people, even if it conflicts with what the gods
want.
Oedipus the King, also known as Oedipus Rex in Greek or Oedipus Tyrannos
in Latin ('Tyrannos' signifies that the throne was not gained through an
inheritance), is the most famous surviving Greek tragedy play written during the
5th century BCE. The play was the first runner up in 429 BC during the festival
of Dionysus in Athens, Greece. Oedipus comes from the Greek word “Oidípous”
which means “swollen foot”.
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ANAGNORISIS
(the moment when the hero
makes an important
discovery)
CATHARSIS
(the adience's feelings of
pity and fear)
HAMARTIA
(the hero's flawthat leads to
histragic downfall)
HUBRIS
(a hero's extreme pride and
disrespect for the natural
order of the world)
NEMESIS
(the unadvoidable fate of
the hero,usually caused by
his own hubris)
PERIPERTEIA
(the hero's experience of a
reversal of fate or fortune)
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Navigate Learning Task
A. Directions: Encircle the letter of the best answer in each of the given
question. (10 points)
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Knot Summary
Sophocles. (1912). Oedipus the King. (F. Storr, Transl.) Retrieved August 1,
2020, from http://socrates.acadiau.ca/courses/engl/rcunningham/Fall2008/
1413/pdf/OedipusRex.pdf
a
suggested time allocation set by the teacher
b
actual time spent by the student (for information purposes only)
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