The Tragedy of Modern Rootlessness
Last year, I taught โOedipus Rexโ to a group of 20-year-old sophomores at a tiny Christian college in Florida. After a few moments in class, I noticed that the story had not moved them the way (I thought) a tragedy was supposed to. It seemed to have filled them with neither pity nor fear, but only empty indifference. I wanted to yell: โHe married his mother! He killed his father! He canโt even look at himself!โ
But then we reflected on Tiresiasโs warning to Oedipus: โI tell you, no man that walks upon the earth / Shall be rooted out more horribly than you.โ[1] I realized that Oedipusโs nightmare was not unlike my studentsโ everyday reality.
Oedipus killed his father. My students hardly knew theirs. Oedipus was exiled. My students felt no love of homeland. Oedipus was denied by the gods. Few of my students belonged to a religious tradition or congregation. Oedipus was horribly uprooted, but my students never had any roots.
By the end of our discussions, however, the tragedy had moved themโand in a way I had not expected. As we contemplated Oedipusโs fall from family, country, and the gods, they spoke of their pain in the absence of these communities. With a tragic vision, they began to see order through disorder, friendship through loneliness, roots through gaping holes. Oedipusโs sorrow revealed their great potential for joy; his nightmare awakened their dreams. They were rootless but did not need to remain that way.
If we recover tragic stories, we might just find our roots, and with our roots, true piety. As the elders of Thebes sing, โThough fools will honor impious men, / In their cities no tragic poet sings.โ[2]

[1] Sophocles, โOedipus Rex,โ I.I.213-214.
[2] Sophocles, โOedipus Rex,โ IIII.II.32-33.