Antigone And Pericles Funeral

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In Ancient Greece, women lacked power in all aspects of life and were deprived of any sense of agency. Any woman who made the decision to voice their opinion and exercise their voice faced the possibility of severe punishment. Women had extremely marginal roles and one of the few opportunities they had to participate in society was through religious activities such as funeral orations. Further, as seen in Sophocle’s play, Antigone, and Pericles’ funeral oration recorded by Thucydides, men in power sought to ensure women lacked agency and suppressed any sense of participation through the threat and acts of violence. By examining these texts and the ideas of biopolitics and necropolitics, which were introduced by Michael Foucault and Achille …show more content…

However, it is important to note that the decision of Antigone’s punishment is not merely based on the burial of Polynices, but on her public challenge to the power of Creon’s rule. Her denial of Creon’s power and public disobedience threatens the social gender order, one in which women are synonymous with political disorder. To evade the danger of social unrest, Creon invokes the ultimate power awarded to male sovereign rulers - the right to inflict death on citizens. Even in the wake of her punishment, Antigone finds the time to assert female agency before she is ordered to a cruel and silent death. When she is facing Creon for the judgment of her burial of Polynices, she articulates a strong critique of Creon’s dictatorship ruling. She states, “For me it was not Zeus who made that order. nor did I think your orders were so strong that you, a mortal man, could over-run the gods’ unwritten and unfailing laws” (Sophocles 450-455). Through this bold statement, Antigone defies the gender norms of her time period and asserts social influence in the public sphere. She reclaims the power from the hands of Creon in her subjugation to a tale of autonomy and …show more content…

Further, Creon’s decision in the punishment of Antigone exposed the male-centered anxieties surrounding sovereign power in Ancient Greece. His condemnation of Antigone to the silent death, shows the fragility of male authority when confronted with female defiance. Creon perceives the public defiance of the edict as a threat to his power as he relates Antigone to a slave saying, “Slave to his neighbor, who can think of pride?” (Sophocles 479) By stating Antigone’s status to be a slave, Creon attempts to negate the social significance of her challenge, reducing her simply to another man’s personal property. His desperate desire to regain control of the social hierarchy is a clear sign of the male fear that any case of female insubordination had the potential to end the male patriarchal order. Creon’s response to Antigone reflects a larger pattern in Greek tragedy in which male rulers feel the need to react with lethal force if engaged with rebellious women. Any woman who intervenes with politics or the social order in the time period would be considered belligerent and disruptive. Therefore, male rulers feel the need to expel them from social

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