Assessment Task 2: Literary Analysis Essay – The Role of Irony in Sophocles’ Oedipus Rex
Unit Context
This task sits within undergraduate world literature or classical studies modules common across Australian, US, UK, Canadian and UAE universities. Students examine Greek tragedy through Sophocles’ Theban plays, focusing on how literary devices shape themes of fate, knowledge and human limitation. The play’s events occur before the opening scene, with Oedipus already king of Thebes when plague strikes, forcing him to investigate Laius’s murder and confront his own past.
Task Description
Write an 800–1,200-word essay that analyses Sophocles’ use of irony in Oedipus Rex. Discuss at least two types of irony (dramatic, verbal or situational) and explain how they advance the central themes of fate, blindness and self-knowledge. Draw directly on the text for evidence and incorporate at least two peer-reviewed secondary sources. Develop a clear thesis in the introduction, support each point with quoted examples, and reach a conclusion that evaluates the overall tragic effect.
Requirements
- Word count: 800–1,200 words (excluding references).
- Use MLA 9th edition for in-text citations and Works Cited (standard for literature units in the listed regions).
- Include a minimum of three direct quotations from the play and references to at least two scholarly sources published 2018–2026.
- Submit as a Word document or PDF through the university learning management system by the due date specified in your unit outline.
- Standard academic formatting: 12-point Times New Roman, double-spaced, 1-inch margins.
Marking Rubric
- Thesis and argument (30%): Clear, focused thesis; logical progression; direct engagement with irony types and themes.
- Analysis of irony and textual evidence (35%): Precise discussion of how irony operates; effective use of quotations; insightful links to fate and knowledge.
- Secondary sources and integration (15%): Relevant scholarly support; proper integration and citation.
- Structure, style and mechanics (10%): Coherent paragraphs; academic tone; error-free writing.
- Referencing and presentation (10%): Accurate MLA format; complete Works Cited list.
Sample Response Essay
Sophocles’ use of dramatic irony in Oedipus Rex creates a powerful contrast between what the audience knows and what the characters believe. From the start, viewers understand that Oedipus has already fulfilled the prophecy by killing his father and marrying his mother, yet he hunts for the culprit with determination. This gap generates intense suspense as his proclamations unwittingly point to himself. Verbal irony emerges when Tiresias tells Oedipus the truth, only for the king to accuse him of lying. Such irony exposes the boundaries of human perception in Sophoclean drama, forcing audiences to question the reliability of knowledge itself. Johnston (2022) argues exactly this point in his detailed study available at https://edizionicafoscari.unive.it/media/pdf/books/978-886-969-655-8/978-886-969-655-8-ch-09_Fe8uAPu.pdf.
Irony and Tragedy
Scholars continue to examine how dramatic irony in Oedipus Rex reflects ancient Greek views on hubris and destiny. A 2024 international journal analysis shows that the layered ironies sustain dramatic tension while inviting philosophical reflection on free will. University teaching resources from institutions in the United States, United Kingdom and Australia pair the play with modern adaptations to illustrate its enduring relevance in literature curricula. Such approaches help students appreciate how Sophocles crafted a narrative where knowledge itself becomes the source of suffering.
- Submit a 800–1,200-word essay analysing dramatic, verbal and situational irony in Sophocles’ Oedipus Rex, supported by textual evidence and scholarly sources, with full rubric, sample paragraphs and references for literature units.
- Complete a 3–5 page paper on the role of irony in Oedipus Rex following detailed task instructions, marking criteria and MLA guidelines for undergraduate Greek tragedy modules.
- Write an essay evaluating how Sophocles uses irony to explore fate and blindness in Oedipus Rex, including requirements, rubric and model response excerpts
Learning Materials / References
Johnston, A. (2022). Irony and the limits of knowledge in Homer and Sophocles. Edizioni Ca’ Foscari. https://edizionicafoscari.unive.it/media/pdf/books/978-886-969-655-8/978-886-969-655-8-ch-09_Fe8uAPu.pdf
Unveiling the layers of dramatic irony in Sophocles’ Oedipus the King. (2024). International Journal of Research and Technology. https://www.ijrti.org/papers/IJRTI2303077.pdf
Fate and free will in Sophocles’ Oedipus Rex. (2025). International Journal of Creative Research Thoughts. https://www.ijcrt.org/papers/IJCRT25A6186.pdf
Oedipus curses upon the murderer: Dramatic irony. (2021). English Journal. https://www.englishjournal.net/archives/2021/vol3issue1/PartA/3-1-13-214.pdf