In the story “Antigone” both characters, Antigone and Creon are examples of tragic characters. The tragic character is a man of noble stature. He is not an ordinary man, but a man with outstanding quality and greatness about him. This character causes his own downfall due to his own tragic flaw. Creon is a tragic character in the story because of his tragic flaw, his pride and failure to understand when he is wrong. This flaw causes the downfall of Creon because he does not listen to anyone when everyone was telling him to just stop and release Antigone. Antigone is also a tragic character in this story. She is a tragic character because she is stubborn and goes through an outburst of fear and self-pity after she is facing death. Antigone stays loyal to her family that slowly brings her to her down fall. In my opinion though I believe that Creon is the real tragic character because Creon is a perfect example of what Aristotle described in his book “Poetics.”…
The title of this play is Antigone. It was written by Sophocles. Creon is a tragic hero because he suffers a horrible fate,realizes flaw,and learns from his mistake.…
Creon is a brat who nobody likes much like Draymond Green who is a brat because he does what he wants without caring about anyone else. In Antigone, Creon is a King that people don't like because of the laws he makes and defies the Gods. Antigone by Sophocles, Creon is the tragic hero because he has excessive pride, creates feelings of pity. In the audience and the reversal of fortune.…
According to Aristotle, a tragic hero in a Greek drama must meet certain requirements. The tragic hero must be of noble birth, be basically good, must have a tragic flaw, and must have a moment of realization at some point in the work. Although Antigone is the namesake of the Sophocles play and is a hero in her own right, she is not a tragic hero. Creon is the true tragic hero of Antigone in the traditional sense of the term.…
Due to Creon' s strict punishment for burial rites, Antigone was suppose be killed for burring her brother, Polyneices. Creon's son was determined to try to change Creon' s mind about Antigone. In hopes that Creon would have mercy on the soon to be daughter-in-law, Haemon confronts Creon by telling him he "makes remarks and never listen to an answer." Creon is set out to execute Antigone not only for breaking the law but also for disrespecting him publicly. He was so focused on her dying he missed the more important part, which was listening to his son's wishes. As a result of Creon not listening to Haemon it only makes the situation worst and their relationship more…
A tragic hero is a person of noble birth with heroic or potentially heroic qualities. Because the tragic hero simply cannot accept a diminished view of the self and because of some personality flaw, the hero fails in this epic struggle against fate (csus.edu). In "Antigone" written by the infamous Sophocles, the characters, Antigone and King Creon, can both be deemed as tragic heroes despite of their beliefs differing immensely. Antigone, who is engaged to Creon's son, is a strong-willed woman who wants to bury her deceased brother, Polyneices, with honor despite the fact that he killed their other brother in war. On the other hand, Creon…
The tragic hero in Antigone is Creon because he exhibits two traits of being a tragic hero, which are being prideful and being high up in society. Tragic heroes are full of pride and Creon definitely is. He is so full of pride, that he is dishonored when someone disobey him, and he express this pride by saying “Not to convince at those that disobey me” (Sophocles 9). After hearing of someone burying the body, Creon is upset that someone disobeys his one and only law, with his pride being, he says angrily “What man has so defied me” (Sophocles 10). Another trait of a tragic hero is that they are high up in society and then later fall to nothing.…
Antigone is a daughter of the marriage between King Oedipus of Thebes and his mother Jocasta. She is the subject of a popular story in which she attempts to secure a burial for her brother Polynices, even though he is seen as a traitor to Thebes and the law forbids even mourning for him, punishable by death. The burial of Polynices takes place during Oedipus' reign in Thebes, before Oedipus marries Jocasta. Sophocles' tragedies Oedipus at Colonus and Antigone, it occurs in the years after Oedipus' banishment and death, and Antigone has to struggle against Creon. After Oedipus' death, it was decided that the two brothers, Eteocles and Polynices were to reign over Thebes’s taking turns. Eteocles, however, did not want to give away his power causing Polynices to leave Thebes to set up an army. In the fight against Thebes, the two brothers kill each other. After this event, Creon declares that, as punishment, Polynices' body must be left on the plain outside the city to rot and be eaten by animals. Eteocles, on the other hand had been buried as tradition warranted. Antigone determines this to be against the laws of the gods, and is determined to bury her brother regardless of Creon's law. She attempts to persuade her sister Ismene to join her, but fails. Antigone buries her brother by herself; eventually Creon's guards discover this and capture her. Antigone is brought before Creon, where she declares that she knew Creon's law but chose to break it, but she…
In Antigone, a play written by Sophocles, the characters Creon and Antigone both fit into a few of Aristotle’s criteria. They are both choices of tragic heroes. They both are neither good nor evil in the extreme but just a man like any of us; they are both born of a better social status than most of us, and both have a tragic flaw in their characters. But even though the story is called Antigone, it is not necessary for Antigone to be the tragic hero. Other things that only Creon does that make him the tragic hero should be responsible for his downfall, the misfortune they get should be greater than what he deserves, and should also have recognition of a truth about himself.…
In Antigone, Antigone buried her brother, Polyneices, against Creon’s law. Creon warned the city of Thebes that if anyone were to bury Polyneices, a stoning would take place as a punishment in front of the public. Antigone, Polyneices’ sister, went to her sister asking for her help in burying her brother and when she refused to help, Antigone went ahead and buried Polyneices herself. Once Creon found out what Antigone had done, he sent her away to the middle of the woods in a closed tomb where she then hung herself. The burying of Polyneices ultimately caused Antigone’s death. While Ismene and Antigone may have differed in their opinions on burying their brother, they both had good intentions.…
In the play Antigone, Creon was not a tragic hero. According to Aristotle there are five characteristics of a tragic hero; those are: falling from grace,hero must have a tragic flaw that results in their downfall, hero does not deserve their fate, audience feels pity for the character, the fall is pure is not pure loss, and the tragic hero accepts his fate. Creon did not fall from grace, he deserved his fate, we don’t feel pity for him,the fall was pure loss, and he did not accept his fate. Although he did have a tragic flaw, he was stubborn…
Antigone, being Polyneice’s sister wants a proper burial for her brother because he after all no matter what action he may have taken is still her brother. She believes that if Creon orders Eteocles to receive a hero burial, her brother should deserve the same ending. However on the other hand, Creon refutes this idea and decides to bury Polyneice’s body in the field of battle to rot. He also proclaims that anyone who tries to honor the traitor’s death will be sentenced to death.…
“I myself am made entirely of flaws, stitched together with good intentions.” In a Greek drama, a tragic flaw causes the downfall of a tragic hero, a person of nobility or higher standing. In Sophocles’ play, Antigone, Creon is the tragic hero because he is a strong man who is loyal to his city, but his stubborn pride gets in the way of him ruling his country, protecting his family, and staying true to the Greek values. Creon is the king of Thebes. He became the king because his sister, Iocaste, married the king and after many deaths in the royal family; the kingdom ended up in Creon’s hands. All these deaths were not necessarily unlikely because in this particular royal family there was a curse which caused the cycle of tragedy followed them. When Creon becomes the king, he has big plans for Thebes, but his flaws disable him from reaching those goals. Creon better fits the definition of a tragic hero, as opposed to his niece Antigone, because he has a tragic flaw, hubris, which affects himself, his entire family, kingdom, and future. Despite having many unattractive qualities, Creon is a noble, loyal king, who cares deeply about his city of Thebes. In Creon’s eyes, protecting his city is his number one priority, which causes him to be afraid of anarchy and scared of the people of Thebes disrespecting him or the city. The first time Creon shows just how important his city is to him while he is giving his first speech to his city and he says, “I call God to/ witness that if I saw my city headed for ruin, I/ should not be afraid to speak out plainly; and I need/ hardly remind you that I would never have any dealings/ with enemies of the people” (Sophocles. Scene 1. 27-31). At this moment it becomes evident that Creon has the best interest of his city at hand. The reader can tell that he does not want anything to jeopardize his kingship or kingdom. These thoughts of betrayal often cause Creon to make irrational decisions and make his laws too strict. He does not…
In the play, Antigone, written by Sophocles, the tragic hero presented is Creon, the king of Thebes. Creon’s obstinate personality led him to avoid listening to anyone else’s reasoning. Creon has used bad judgment while he was ruling over Thebes. However, Creon went to great lengths to correct his mistakes. Creon’s personality, wrong conduct, and effort to reverse his mistakes make him a tragic hero.…
Creon is a rather weak man who has been thrust into a position of authority and is afraid he won't be able to handle it. As a result, he doesn't dare reconsider any of his decisions--doing so, he thinks might make him appear weak and cause his subjects to lose respect for him. So when he orders that Polyneices be left unburied and then orders Antigone to be entombed alive when she's caught violating the order, he can't let himself listen to her or Ismene or to Haimon. He even refuses to listen to Teiresias, conveying the displeasure of the gods, until Teiresias has left, but in fact that message offers him a face-saving way out, he thinks that no one can call him weak for backing down in the face of divine displeasure. However, he makes the same mistake Teiresias has accused him of: getting things backwards. Teiresias points out that he has buried the living and left the dead unburied, and now, when the chorus advises him to free Antigone and bury Polyneices, he does those two things in reverse order, so that Antigone is left in the tomb to despair while Polyneices is being given a royal funeral, and she hangs herself. At the end, after her suicide has led to that of Haimon and his to that of his mother, Creon must face the fact that his misguided stubbornness has destroyed his personal world.…