Creon, as the ruler of the land, is obligated to carry out social order. He has ordered that the body of Polynices should be left to rot because he was a traitor to the city. Antigone has disobeyed Creon’s orders by digging up her brother’s grave after his proper burial rites were forbidden. She has already buried her parents and brother Eteocles, who died fighting Polynices, and feels obligated to honor her brother’s life. Antigone is also determined to obey the gods, because it is against morality to leave any corpse unburied. She informs Creon that “Death longs for the same rites for all”.…
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.”…
Both in the book and the movie, Antigone asks Haemon to come over but does not tell him why. She does not want him to know that she buried Polynices and was going to be put to death. She talks to him about the fight they had the night before to be sure that…
Throughout the play Antigone, Creon is portrayed as the king of discipline and pride. Creon’s pride is what makes him the tragic figure of Antigone. Though Antigone takes her life as the result of her sentence from Creon, it is not her pride that defines her fate but her unwillingness to accept her fate.…
In the story of Antigone, there are two main characters Creon, and Antigone. Many people think that Antigone is the tragic hero, but i think that Creon is the tragic hero. In the story of Antigone, king Creon was a tragic hero because, he was very stubborn, he is of noble greatness, and he made a bad mistake by not burying Polyneices.…
Antigone believed that not burying her brother Polyneices and burying her other brother Eteocles due to the command of her uncle Creon was a very wrong thing to do and being the loyal person she was she did not accept this law carried by her Uncle and disobeyed him with the mindset knowing burying her brother Polyneices was the right thing to do know the consequences that came with it.…
A common theme in literature is that of the tragic hero, a character that has suffered due to a flaw in his or her own self. Antigone by Sophocles has a few examples of this trope. King Creon excellently fits this mold of tragic hero.…
What is a tragic hero? Antagone is an interesting play with many interesting characters included in it. Antigone who is a women who just wanted to give her loving brother, Polyneices a proper burial. Creon Antigone’s uncle who sought after giving Polyneices the title of traitor. There is a right and a wrong and in my opinion Creon was in the wrong, i mean by making stupid, and stubborn decisions that would soon lead to his downfall, making him the tragic hero of this play.…
In Antigone, a Greek tragedy written by Sophocles, Creon is a tyrant and arrogant character who sees the world through the veil of his beliefs. When he decrees the punishment of death upon Antigone, he completely disregards every opinion that is against his own. By ignoring the views of others, he jeopardizes his strength as a ruler. Sophocles uses the extended metaphor of the ship of state to show how Creon’s self-righteous way of thinking leads to unwanted outcomes. From Creon’s mistakes we learn that if you let your pride stand in the way of seeing other people’s opinions you can impair yourself more than you had planned.…
Antigone's relentless pride and ego leads to her overall downfall and, ultimately, she pays with her life because of her excessive pride. Kreon, the King of Thebes, is obligated to his duties as a king to rule his kingdom. Kreon is Antigone’s uncle, and he is an older man that surrendered himself to his throne, “You cannot measure a man’s character, policies, or his common sense- until you see him in action. I’ll always speak out when I see Thebes choosing destruction rather than deliverance,” (712). Antigone is stubborn and possesses excessive pride, which leads to her downfall. Antigone is devoted to maintaining and protecting divine laws, which includes burying her brother, “The city is forbidden to mourn him or bury him- not tomb, not tears. Violate any provision- the sentence is you’re stoned to death in your own city,” (707). Antigone is…
Antigone is an award winning play by Sophocles, one of the three best Greek dramatists of all time. Antigone is a mythical princess of Thebes. She is the product of the accidental incestuous marriage between King Oedipus and Jocasta, whom is Oedipus’ mother as well. Antigone had two brothers and a sister: Polynices, Eteocles, and her sister, Ismene. After Oedipus discovered that he had married his mother, he fled, leaving Thebes to be ruled by his sons. Polynices and Eteocles had their differences arguing over the throne. Polynices left Thebes and returned with an army to declare war on Thebes. The two brothers killed each other during the war, leaving Thebes to be ruled by Jocasta’s brother Creon,…
In Antigone, both Antigone and Haemon commit suicide. Like her mother Antigone hangs herself, and at the sight of her body Haemon plunges a sword into himself. The pain that they both felt stemmed from Creon’s stubbornness and pride. The Messenger tells the Choragus that Haemon was “driven mad by the murder his father had done” referring to the imprisonment and death of Antigone. Enclosing Antigone alive in a tomb was intended to kill her. The Choragus and the Messenger blame Creon for the deaths of Antigone and Haemon because Creon would not listen to reason from Teiresias. Teiresias tells Creon that by putting Antigone in “a grave before her death” he has incurred the wrath or the gods and “curses will be hurled” at him. By directly causing Antigone to end her life the gods punished him by taking away his son, and eventually wife, in the same manner.…
Miller asked a question in his text, The Dark Night of the Soul, which is asked on numerous occasions. ‘What might the Literate Arts be good for?’ Miller gives situations and reasons why we could say the Literate Arts are useless in today’s world. What might the Literate Arts be good for? I ask this question a lot nowadays too. When I go for an English class or see literary books, the question creeps into my mind unconsciously. In this modern world ‘reading and writing’ have gone downhill and yet people do not seem bothered or affected by it which makes the doubt in literary power even stronger. But after a lot of thinking and research, I have come to realize that literate arts are still needed in our world.…
In "The Ways We Lie," by Stephanie Ericsson, the author depicts the many ways humans lie and justifies the reasons for doing so. There is the white lie, which is basically telling a harmless untruth instead of a harmful truth. Facades are basically changing your personality while ignoring the plain facts, as the title implies, is a false action done with the intent to deceive. Deflecting is not answering the question at all; it is being up-front about comfortable issues and not revealing the couple of very important issues that changes everything.…
It all ends tragically, with the deaths of Antigone, Haemon, and Eurydice. Throughout the entire play, even between arguments not mentioned like the son vs. father fight between Haemon and Creon, the entire play is an epic battle of right vs. right, with the only thing ending the quarrels being death. Antigone and Haemon can reach up to a level of 5-6 on Kohlberg’s scale, whereas Creon and Ismene reach a maximum of a level 4. Both are right, but for different reasons. Creon and Ismene focus more on their selves and their relationships with others more than anything else, but Antigone would most likely do the same thing, even if it was not her brother she’d be sacrificing herself…