"Tragic hero" Essays and Research Papers

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    Brutus: A Tragic Hero

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    Hero is not just a title and to be a true hero it takes more than getting your elderly neighbours cat out of the tree. Throughout the play it is also safe to say Brutus is not a villain. The best category for Brutus falls under the personnel of a tragic hero. Throughout the play it is obvious to the reader that Brutus is loved by most‚ including Caesar. Secondly‚ Brutus revolves his actions around the people of Rome and less his own wants/needs. Lastly‚ he can not be classified a true hero because

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    Tragic Flaw

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    those characters have a tragic flaw; that influences the character to their downfall. The tragic flaw for each character is different. It is influenced by many factors‚ such as family and the environment they are exposed to. These influences lead to the death of the eternal love of Romeo and Juliet‚ or even the life of a school girl‚ Alaska; in Looking for Alaska. The tragic flaw of a character is influenced by many factors‚ leading to the character’s downfall. The tragic flaw could be observed

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    Things Fall Apart and Okonkwo; A Classic Greek Tragedy and Tragic Hero Both the novel Things Fall Apart by Chinua Achebe‚ and its main character Okonkwo closely adhere to the definitions of a classic Greek tragedy and a typical tragic hero. First of all‚ Okonkwo is a tragic hero by the Greek definition. While Okonkwo wasn’t born to a nobleman or king (as the definition of a tragic hero states)‚ he was a man of high status and respect in his community‚ as Obierika stated near the end of the book

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    In Frankenstein also known as The Modern Prometheus‚ the protagonist‚ Victor Frankenstein‚ to an extent is a tragic hero. This is because it follows some of the many common traits of a typical Aristotelian tragic hero. These include how the Frankenstein is lead to his downfall due to his excessive pride. Other points include how Frankenstein‚ the hero discovered his fate by his own actions and also how he saw and understood his demise‚ and that his fate was because of his own actions. The last point

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    Hamlet's Tragic Flaw

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    Is Hamlet’s distress understandable? Why does he fail to act until too late? Is his inaction due to a tragic flaw? Until relatively recently‚ critics tended to assume that the causes of tragic misfortune resided in some moral defect of the protagonist. Aristotle’s term hamartia (derived from “fault‚” “failure‚” guilt” but literally meaning to “miss the mark”) was often translated as “tragic flaw‚” leading critics to seek the chink in the hero’s armour (such as pride or ambition) which leads to

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    The Tragic Figure of Antigone When people recall tragedies‚ they often think Shakespearean. These tragedies were usually named after their tragic protagonists (e.g.‚ Romeo and Juliet‚ Macbeth‚ Julius Caesar‚ Hamlet‚ Othello). However‚ many tragic characters did not have an eponymous play. For example‚ in Antigone‚ a woman loses her life trying to honor her fallen brother and inadvertently causes Creon‚ the king‚ to lose his wife and daughter. Since we have two important characters’ detriments‚

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    Aristotle's Tragic Flaw

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    A man cannot become a hero until he can see the root of his own downfall.” Aristotle A tragic hero is someone great‚ but not perfect. He or she walks towards his or her own death. The Heroes downfall is a result of the hero’s actions and decisions. However‚ his misfortune is usually is not deserved and is brought about not by vice or depravity‚ but by some error or frailty. This error or frailty can be illustrated as his tragic flaw‚ or his hamaratia. The tragic heroes own destruction is sometimes

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    Antigone fit Aristotle’s definition of a tragic hero? Aristotle defined a tragic hero as: - "The intermediate sort of person‚ one whop is not pre-eminently virtuous and just‚ one who incurs misfortune not as a result of vice and depravity‚ but by some error of judgement while enjoying great reputation and prosperity" and Creon and Antigone are the characters that could fit this definition best. Aristotle first of all suggests that a tragic hero must be someone of high stature and status

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    hamlets tragic flaw

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    HelpWhat is Hamlet’s tragic flaw?Topic: Hamlet "" style="box-sizing: border-box; border: 0px; padding: 0px; vertical-align: bottom;"> erich12 | Student | eNotes Newbie Posted June 6‚ 2007 at 11:01 AM via web dislike9like What is Hamlet’s tragic flaw? 46 Answers | Add Yours lcassidy | High School Teacher |(Level 1) Assistant Educator Posted June 6‚ 2007 at 11:04 AM (Answer #2) dislike3like A tragic hero is a character who suffers a downfall from a tragic flaw in personality

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    Okonkwo's Tragic Flaw

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    Things Fall Apart follows the style of a classic shakespearian tragedy with a tragic hero who inadvertently causes his own downfall through his own actions. Chinua Achebe crafts a traditional Shakespearian tragedy that differs from the culture of Shakespeare’s tragedies. Achebe represents Okonkwo as the tragic hero who is blinded by his pride. Okonkwo follows the path of the traditional Shakespearian hero and is undone by his own blindness. Achebe starts the path of a Shakespearian tragedy by introducing

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