Death And Burial In The Three Theban Plays

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The Three Theban Plays are haunted by the complex themes of death and burial. Each character has a unique perspective, which is largely shaped by their views on law, justice and most importantly, the divine. However, the connection to the divine extends deeper into this story when examining the idea of burial. The characters in the plays demonstrate how death and burial can be used for both reverence and vengeance. Death is a tool used by the gods to bring either justice or glory to mortals. Antigone receives glory through death by putting divine law over human law. The first Theban Play: Antigone, begins with a conversation between the sisters Ismene and Antigone. They discuss how to approach the fact that their brother is regarded as a traitor at the orders of Creon, but they still feel the need to bury him. …show more content…

Ismene acts as the mouthpiece of the audience/reader when she says: “What you’d bury him—even when a law forbids the city?”(Antigone lines 52-53). Not even two full pages into this play, the themes of death and burial appear. The themes are discussed through out the text. However, it is most notable when Antigone commits suicide. Creon had sentenced her to die for her crime of burying the traitor Polynices. Instead of being executed, Antigone makes herself a martyr by committing suicide. Because the gods place such a high value on burying and honoring the death of one’s loved ones, Creon’s order for Polynices not to be buried directly contradicts the gods’ law. Antigone, in standing against Creon, is honoring the gods and her brother. This statement is made clear when Antigone says to Creon: “These laws I was not about to break them, not out of fear of some man’s wounded pride and face the retribution of the gods.” By contradicting Creon’s laws in favor of the laws of the gods, Antigone receives glory through

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