"Antigone tragic flaw catharsis" Essays and Research Papers

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    Hamlet is a play written to make the reader or director think for himself and create what he thinks to be Hamlets tragic flaw come alive. Any argument could be well supported or demolished on quotes and actions from the text and one’s interpretation of these. The bottom line is not what is Hamlet’s tragic flaw‚ but what tragic flaw can best be supported by the reader.<br><br>Hamlet’s tragic flaw is his inconsistent approach to problems. In the scenarios that may call for quick‚ decisive behavior‚ Hamlet

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    Pat Tillman‚ but rather a person who has serious flaws that lead to the downfall of the character. In Antigone‚ both Creon and Antigone share some tragic elements: tragic hero‚ hamartia‚ hubris‚ and nemesis. However‚ Creon is a more tragic hero than Antigone because his character has tragic elements that are absent from the character of Antigone: anagnorisis‚ peripeteia‚ and catharsis. There are many tragic elements that both Creon and Antigone share. According to Aristotle‚ the hero must be a

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    In the past‚ the hero who defeated the Sphinx‚ Oedipus‚ became victim of a tragic flaw. People could provide many different ideas for the flaws of Oedipus‚ and have a variety of correct answers. Likewise‚ quite a few people would say that anger became Oedipus’ tragic flaw. A big part of his anger came from the murder of the King of Thebes‚ Laius‚ his father. Part of Oedipus believed that he had killed the King‚ however he refused to admit it and displaced his anger into blame towards Creon

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    Biff Loman's Tragic Flaw

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    He expresses a tragic flaw‚ undergoes a fall due to his flaw‚ and then endures suffering after he recognizes his flaw. His tragic flaw‚ like his father’s‚ can be best identified as a lack of self-knowledge. He does realize that he doesn’t want to be like his father‚ but has trouble telling him this due to Willy’s flaws. He moves the plot along by agreeing to meet with Bill Oliver. As previously stated‚ the meeting is

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    Oedipus Tragic Flaw Essay

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    Is there such a thing as perfection or is it merely as fleeting hope? A tragic flaw by definition is a flaw in the character or personality of someone. In the play written by Sophocles‚ Oedipus‚ the protagonist‚ falls victim to his own imperfection. Oedipus’ pride leads him down the path of the truth and therefore‚ pushes the theme of fatalism forward in the play. Oedipus’ tragic flaw that is portrayed in the play is his pride and because it‚ he learns that despite his best efforts‚ the prophecy

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    What is Oedipus’ tragic flaw? Tragic flaw is a failing of character in a hero of a tragedy that brings about his downfall. Oedipus appears to have many flaws on the surface namely his selfish temperament‚ curiosity and of course his hubris or excessive pride. Firstly‚ his superiority and projection of ego is proved in exposition‚ when Oedipus shows a paternalistic attitude towards his subjects by calling people ‘’children’’ about four times. Furthermore there is a repetition of

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    King Lear - Tragic Flaw

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    Tragic heroes are so much the highest points in their human landscape that they seem the inevitable conductors of the power about them...great trees more likely to be struck by lightning than a clump of grass. Conductors may of course be instruments as well as victims of the divine lightning.” Tragic heroes are characters of notoriety; held in high regard but are struck with misfortune through their own error. The most noble of men can succumb to their own flaws until driven to the brink of insanity

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    Macbeth’s tragic flaw is his infatuation with becoming a high power‚ and refusing to disappoint his lady by being a "coward". Lady Macbeth’s definition of being a coward‚ is playing fair instead of playing dirty. Lady Macbeth insists he is a coward‚ and he will not become of the high power if he does not play dirty. When he shows his disinterest in playing dirty‚ Lady Macbeth manipulates him by telling him he is not being a man. Because of Macbeth’s infatuation with becoming of high power‚ and his

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    Brutus: Nobility Marred by a Tragic Flaw After reading The Tragedy of Julius Caesar by William Shakespeare‚ some readers interpret Julius Caesar as the tragic hero of the play. However‚ Brutus is the real tragic hero. A tragic hero is a character that is virtuous‚ but makes crucial errors in judgment or possesses a tragic flaw that leads to their downfall. The tragic flaw that mars Brutus is his rigid sense of moral and political principles. Unlike Caesar‚ Brutus was able to separate his public

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    capable of change‚ he becomes a tragic hero; because Antigone is incapable of change‚ she never becomes a tragic heroine. Aristotle defines a tragic hero as someone‚ usually a male‚ who “falls from a high place mainly due to their fatal flaw.” During the highest point of the tragic hero’s life‚ something is revealed to the protagonist causing a reversal in their fortune. This reversal of fortune is caused by the flaw in their character. Tragedy evokes catharsis‚ a feeling of pity for the protagonist

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