Sophocles : Four Tragedies -

Sophocles : Four Tragedies -

Sophocles doesn’t offer easy answers. He doesn’t tell you that being "good" will save you. Instead, he shows that the world is complex, the gods are often silent, and our greatest strengths—like Oedipus’ intellect or Antigone’s loyalty—can also be our undoing.

Sophocles didn’t just write plays; he mapped the blueprint of the human psyche. Of the 120-plus plays he penned for the Athenian festivals, only seven survived in full. Among them, a core quartet—, Oedipus at Colonus , Antigone , and Electra —stands as a monumental exploration of justice, family, and the crushing weight of destiny. Sophocles : four tragedies

Often called the "perfect tragedy," this is the ultimate "no-win" scenario. Sophocles doesn’t offer easy answers

The irony of human knowledge. Oedipus is a man of high intelligence and "sight," yet he is completely blind to his own identity. It asks a haunting question: Can we ever truly escape our origins? 2. Oedipus at Colonus Sophocles didn’t just write plays; he mapped the