Thursday, January 2, 2020
Oedipus The King, Death Of A Salesman, And The Glass...
  In unit two of the semester, the class focused our attention on drama. As a class we read three very good playââ¬â¢s Oedipus the King, Death of a Salesman, and The Glass Menagerie. While all three of these plays were well written and had their share of both dynamic and static characters, the reader canââ¬â¢t help but notice that the mothers in all three plays were secondary to their male counterparts. The question posed is whether or not the mothers were nurturing, the answer was not easy to come by since all three women were very different. While there were some mothers who were nurturing to an extent, all of these women had their flaws and dysfunctions which led to them to not be considered nurturers.  In Oedipus the King by Sophocles the mother Jocasta spent years married to her biological son, and bore his children. The play was written as a Greek tragedy in which the characters have a fatal flaw, and this applies to Jocasta. Right after King Laius and Queen Jocasta have th   eir son Oedipus they receive startling news from the Oracle in which it is predicted that one day their son will rise up to kill his father, then marry and sleep with his mother. In order to avoid this King Laius decided to kill their son, and Jocasta willingly agrees. After years pass by, King Laius gets killed by a passerby, Jocasta is to marry the riddle solver, and life continues as normal. Almost all at once Jocastaââ¬â¢s life shatters, she finds out that her husband was killed by her son, she married herShow MoreRelatedEssay Prompts4057 Words à  |à  17 Pagesunderstanding of the work as a whole. Avoid mere plot summary.    You may select a work from the list below or another novel or play of comparable literary merit.    	Alias Grace					Middlemarch  	All the Kingââ¬â¢s Men				Moby-Dick  	Candide					Obasan  	Death of a Salesman				Oedipus Rex  	Doctor Faustus				            Orlando  	Don Quixote                                                      	A portrait of the Artist as a Young Man  	A Gesture Life					Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead  	Ghosts						The Scarlet Letter    
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