Friday, January 24, 2020
Loyalty Conflicts between Family and State in Homerââ¬â¢s Odyssey, and Soph
Loyalty Conflicts between Family and State in Homerââ¬â¢s Odyssey, and Sophoclesââ¬â¢ Oedipus the King and Antigone             Everyday we are faced with hundreds of decisions.  Some of the decisions take very little time and are made without a second thought.  Other decisions hold more at stake and can tear a person in two while trying to make the final decision.  The basis of many of the hardest decisions is the conflict between family and state.  The decision between pursuing a career and starting a family first is an example.  Once a family is started, there are endless decisions about daycare, office meetings, and school activities to decide which will take priority.  These decisions can become harder during a time of war.  People are forced to choose between their personal lives including education, family and careers, and their duties as a citizen.            Some of the earliest recorded literature presents this conflict between family and state.  Homerââ¬â¢s novel, The Odyssey, deals with the issue at a time of war.  Sophocles also addresses the conflict in two of his famous plays, Oedipus the King and Antigone.  In the Greek language, this is a conflict between oikos1 and polis. 2  This essay will present the separation of loyalty between oikos and polis as is evident in early literature and in decisions of today.          A modern example of the conflict between oikos and polis at a time of war can be seen in one National Guard soldier, Ryan.  In February, 2003, Ryan was twenty-one years old and had just received a degree from a two-year college.  He had met the woman he wanted to marry and had recently proposed to her.  The couple had not set a date, but was looking at the spring of 2004.  Everything was headed towards a bright f...              ...  New York:  Penguin, 1979.    Homer.  The Odyssey.  Trans. Robert Fagles.  New York: Penguin, 1996.    Sophocles.  The Three Theban Plays Antigone, Oedipus the King, Oedipus at Colonus. Trans.  Robert Fagles.  New York: Penguin, 1984.    Notes    1 Oikos is the Greek word meaning the family.    2 Polis is the Greek word meaning the government.    3 The Greek word for assembly is agora, which is the place of the meeting and the meeting itself.    4 Greek word for tradition, custom.    5 Greek word for multitudes.    6  Finley.    7 Greek word for king.    8 Greek word showing the might that the king has.    9  Finley, 91.    10 Homer, 228.    11 Finley, 120.    12 Auge.    13 Auge.    14 Sophocles, pg 63, lines 85 ââ¬â 92.    15 Sophocles, pg 97, line 824.    16 Sophocles.  pg 97, line 825.    17 Sophocles, pg 82, lines 503- 508.    18 Sophocles, pg 94, lines 756-761.                         
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