Antigone felt it was right to bury her brother because of her families beliefs. In Episode I, Antigone herself said, “If thus thou speakest, thou wilt have hatred from me and will justly be subject to the lasting hatred of the dead. But leave me, and the folly that is mine alone, to suffer this dread thing; for I shall not suffer aught so dreadful as an ignoble death.” (Sophocles). For Antigone to say that she would rather die than to have her brother not properly buried was a big thing to me. She obviously is willing to put her life on the line for her family, because she knows the consequences if she gets caught.…
Similarly, both women's decision and actions starts their tragic path. Antigone is decided to bury her brother, Polynices, being aware that disobeying will lead to death. While talking to her sister, Ismene, she said "he has no right to keep from my own"60. Antigone believes that as the woman of the family is her responsibility to bury her brother and it's the law of god which should overrule the law of state. She doesn't fear confrontation and admits to Creon that it was her who bury his body at the time of accusation. Antigonie says "give me glory! What greater glory could I win than to give my own brother decent burial?"561 She believed her death was her glory. Her pride and ambitious way to be remembered made her fearless of death.…
Antigone disobeys the king by burying her brother who Creon views as a traitor to Thebes. She realizes that this action will result in her death but is still willing to do so as long as…
Antigone’s passionate monologue portrays her character as a compassionate sister possessing considerable honor and admirable morality. As she awaits her inevitable execution at the hands of king Creon, Antigone muses over her willful decision to properly bury her brother, Polyneices. King Creon had made…
In Sophocles' play "Antigone”, the ideas of obeying the law of one’s community and following ones own moral beliefs come into conflict. The plot revolves around two brothers, Eteocles and Polyneices having killed each other in an attempted to gain rule and their Uncle Creon gaining power after their deaths. He orders Eteocles given an honorable funeral and Polyneices to be left in the streets to rot. Creon believes that Polyneices' body shall be condemned to this because of his civil disobedience and treachery against the city. However, the dead brothers’ sister, Antigone, believes this unfair to Polyneices and insulting to the Gods.…
In the story “Antigone” there are characters who are honored and characters who are a disgrace based on their actions in the story.…
In the play, Antigone by Sophocles Antigone is a rebel against society because she went against Creon, the king of Thebes to bury her brother. Antigone breaks Creon’s law because she believed it was unfair that her brother Eteocles was buried with full military honors and Polyneices wasn’t. So she went on a mission to bury Polyneices even though she knew her actions would come with serious consequences. Then when she was finally able to bury her brother she was captured by the sentry and brought to the king. When she stood before him she said, “This death of mine Is of no importance; but if I had left my brother.…
Antigone proves herself to be a very loyal family member when she states, “That must be your excuse, I suppose. But as for me, I will bury the brother I love” (Pro. 64-65). She cares not of the law set forth by Creon when it conflicts with her beliefs concerning loyalty to loved ones. She chose the law of the gods above all other decrees, disregarding that the cost is her life. Even after the body’s guards brush off the thin layer of dust to negate the effect of the prompt burial given by Antigone, the heroine risks life and limb to see that Polynieces receives a proper burial, and she is arrested in the process. Her retort to Creon’s accusations was, “I do. I deny nothing.” Antigone is confident in her choice at this point. She even stands up for Ismene’s fraud confession, and she will “not have [Ismene] help” because Antigone’s loyalty to her family is too great (1. 132).…
In Sophocles’ Antigone, Antigone, on the other hand, believes her act of civil disobedience to bury Polyneices was justified due to her belief that the laws of the gods should be carried out above any man made law, including those declared by Kreon and that those who have passed away before her must be honored. In the beginning of the play, Antigone tries to convince her sister, Ismene, to bury the body of her brother. Ismene, at first, was skeptical, for she knew it was Kreon’s decree that no one shall bury Polyneices for he was a traitor to the state. However, Antigone thought otherwise. Antigone states, “I’ll lie there, dear to him, with my dear friend, when I’ve performed this crime of piety; for I must please those down below a longer time than those up here, since I shall lie there always. You, though, if you think it best, dishonor what is honored by the gods” (Sophocles 22-23). Antigone believes burying her brother is of higher standards than to follow the laws of Kreon, for the gods must be worshiped above all else and she follows her principles to the very end. A king may rule the land, but the gods rule all and it is this mindset that Antigone possesses that allows her to fulfill the gods’ wishes. Later in the play, when Antigone is questioned by Kreon himself, she denies nothing and bluntly states that his mortal laws are no match to the laws of the gods. She claims, “It was not Zeus who made this proclamation; nor was it Justice dwelling with the gods below who set in place such laws as these for humankind; nor did I think your proclamations had such strength that, mortal as you are, you could outrun those laws that are the gods’, unwritten and unshakable. Their laws are not for now or yesterday, but live forever…” (Sophocles 38). Antigone followed through her decision to bury her brother because the gods’ laws are eternal. It was Antigone’s strength to stand by her…
Through the course of Antigone, a play by Sophocles, various characters justify their actions based on their own perception of duty. A strong example of one of them is Antigone. In the play, Antigone experiences a series of moral tests. She has to choose whether to abide by the laws of Thebes or take her own path and follow moral laws and obey the gods instead of the King Creon. She chooses to go against Creon and follow her own moral laws and bury her brother.…
She was a product of incest and because of that, was often out casted. Just like Liesel, she had a brother who passed away as well, but on different terms. He was denied a proper burial because he fought his other brother for the throne. Antigone was livid when she found out that the king, who was also a member of her family, would do this, especially to his bloodline. Although Antigone’s sister tried her best to talk her out of going through with her plan, she was determined; she was going to bury her brother. Not one time was she scared about the consequences because she valued her brother’s lost life more than her own. Just like Liesel, she had no problem defying a man of very high power.…
The play “Antigone,” by Sophocles displays an interesting storyline in which the main characters Antigone and Creon undergo various obstacles due to their actions. Throughout the play, Antigone attempts to secure a respectable burial for her brother Polyneices. By choosing to protest and defy Creon’s rule, Antigone unquestionably breaks the law. However, her defiance does not seem like an act of civil disobedience against injustice because Antigone was acting in her own self-interest when considering dying for her brother.…
Antigone is a tragedy by the ancient Greek playwright Sophocles. It deals with Antigone’s burial of her brother Polyneices in defiance of the laws of Creon and the state, and the tragic repercussions of her act of civil disobedience. Antigone defies the law, buries her brother, and is caught.…
Antigone’s dedication to her family is evident in the beginning of the tragedy, in her discourse with Ismene: “At least he is my brother…I will not prove false to him…I myself will bury him. I will be good to die, so doing. I shall lie by his side, loving him as he loved me; I shall be a criminal-but religious one” she ends,” The time in which I must please those that are dead is longer than I must please those of this world”(Antigone, lines 50,80). Antigone represents the law of the Gods and devotion to her family; she shows courage by enduring suffering and dying for her beliefs that stand apart from the political power of Creon, who represents the laws of the city.…
Antigone is a tragedy by Sophocles written in or before 441 BC. It is a play about one girl’s beliefs against the injustices of civil law and the success of the orders of the gods. Sophocles creates a free woman figure against not only the mortal laws of the state but also men’s power. He engages necessity of harmony between tradition and state in Antigone. It deals with Ancient Greece’s people problems of daily life. Such as state (tyranny) vs. people, laws, customs, man vs. woman, civil disobedience and so on. In the tragedy, despite Creon forbids to burial of Antigone’s brother. She decides to bury her brother and keep his honor, she takes her future into her own hand and for the sake of her family’s love she risks her life. Her sister, Ismene, does not want to disobey the state’s rules. Antigone goes throughout her plan. When she caught during the burying process, Antigone does protest her way out of her punishment. She openly opposed Creon’s leadership capabilities and his ability to judge. She takes her future into her own hands for the final time by taking her own life, she does not willing to spend another day under Creon’s rule. Antigone is a symbol of civil disobedience in the form of a girl to accept an unjust king’s laws. On the other hand, She is devotedly attached to traditions. According to Antigone, human being must not think oneself superior from gods and harmony of customs’ laws and state’s laws must not break down.…