Sophocles' Antigone - Creon and Antigone are Two of a Kind

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Creon and Antigone – Two of a Kind

A popular message of the media these days is that underneath the surface, despite our external differences, we're all really quite similar. Whether or not that is a universal truth, it certainly applies to Creon and Antigone, the main characters Sophocles' tragedy Antigone. They appear different outwardly but are two of a kind in personality. Throughout Antigone, they are in almost constant contention with each other. They are on opposite sides of an argument, and they lash out at each other unrelentingly. But, despite their obvious difference, Creon and Antigone are far more alike than they seem at first glance.

Both Creon and Antigone are very proud and don't back down from what they have said. Antigone is convinced that she was right to bury the body of Polyneices:

But when my mother's son lay dead, had I

Neglected him and left him there unburied,

That would have caused me grief; this causes none.

And if you think it folly, then perhaps

I am accused of folly by the fool. (ll. 455-459)

&nbs...

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