While reading the first play of Sophocles titled “Antigone”, I noticed two heroically tragic figures. Those two figures were Creon and Antigone and both characters possessed many traits that made them both tragic hero’s. Also both Antigone and Creon has a high rank because both tragic hero’s had a hard fall in the play. The main conflict in the play is between Creon and Antigone. Creon has demanded that the body of Polynices is not going to be given the proper burial, but Antigone hopes to do the complete opposite and give her brother the proper burial. Later on in the play, Creon makes the decision to excuse Antigone for disobeying his laws, but he is too late. Creon comes to find out that Antigone hangs herself. Then Haemon, Creon’s son …show more content…
and Antigone’s future husband, tries to kill Creon but ends up killing himself. After all of that chaos, Creon’s wife Eurydice, stabs herself. I feel as though that this play applies perfectly with Aristotle’s definition of a tragedy. One of Antigone's tragic flaws is her piety to the Gods and, nonetheless, her disrespect to the King, Creon.
At the start of the play, Creon puts out a request that Antigone's brother, Polynices, may not be buried because he was a traitor and he invaded the city. This is unacceptable to Antigone, and she is focused to honor the Gods and give her brother a proper burial, regardless of the fact that it means being put to death for disobeying Creon's orders. Antigone's motivation and will to honor the Gods and her brother is one of her tragic flaws. Once Creon punished Antigone, the prophet Tiresias told Creon that the Gods will take revenge for his behavior. For example, on page 111-112, Tiresias says, “You will learn when you listen to the warnings . . . It’s best to learn from a good advisor when he speaks for your own good: it’s pure gain”. Creon’s tragic flaws were his abuse of power and the decisions he made to cause the downfall of the …show more content…
Thebes. Ultimately, what makes Antigone a tragic hero in the play are qualities she has which leads to her fall.
One quality Antigone possesses, is how stubborn and hard-headed she is towards Creon’s laws. Antigone shows her stubbornness when she makes the decision to bury her brother after Creon said if anybody does, they will be executed. In support of Antigone, she is following the laws of the Gods, not Creon’s laws that were completely different from the Gods. But it is this specific act that leads to Antigone’s fall later on in the play. However, Creon’s tragic flaw, pride and insolence, causes his fall in the play. He is also stubborn and his pride is so high, he always thinks everything he says and does is the right thing to do. When the Chorus tried to tell Creon that he made a mistake by saying that nobody can bury Polyneices, Creon did not want to listen. Then later after Tiresias was done talking, the Leader and Creon had a conversation and Creon’s pride finally caught up with him. For example, on 116-117, Creon made the decision to free Antigone because disasters were soon going to be sent by the
Gods. Before Antigone dies, she admits to what she has done and that she was not wrong for what she did. She recognizes that her actions urged her to destroy her friendships of her sister and her fiancé, Haemon. She is confident in her disobedience all the way until the end when she says, “I have no share of marriage hymns . . . I am taken down the prepared road.” I think that overall, Antigone was a noble character because she followed the laws of the Gods which were right and not Creon’s. On the other hand, Creon’s noble traits was little to none because I did not see him as a good person. But Creon ended up recognizing his weaknesses and his flaws. Also as I was reading, I noticed that he bought all of his issues on himself and should have been more observant. Overall, in this tragedy “Antigone”, Sophocles uses many strategies that causes the reader to have a sense of feeling fearful or having sympathy towards other characters. Also in the play “Antigone”, the author uses provocative characters as the protagonist to make the as interesting as possible. Me personally, the play did not make me feel fearful or have a feeling of sympathy. Instead, the play made me want to read it over and over because of how exciting it was.
The plot revolves around a story of Antigone’s struggle to give Polynices, her brother, his final rights by giving him a proper burial, despite the fact that Creon has forbid for anyone to do so as Polynices was a traitor to Thebes and its people. One major struggle throughout the play is the apparent conflict between Antigone and Creon. Creon and Antigone have temperaments that clash with each other. Antigone values passion while Creon values the state. Although they have very different values, Antigone and Creon have very similar personalities. They are both stubborn, independent people who are so similar that they can never see eye to eye on issues. Both Antigone and Creon are filled with pride and passion in their beliefs. These traits can be considered both very advantageous and moral as well as being a negative trait that represents the stubbornness in human beings. Antigone and Creon are incredibly proud, making it impossible for either one to concede defeat once they have taken a stand for what they believe in. As stated by Tiresias “stubbornness brand...
In Sophocles' Greek tragedy, Antigone, two characters undergo character changes. During the play the audience sees these two characters' attitudes change from close-minded to open-minded. It is their close-minded, stubborn attitudes, which lead to their decline in the play, and ultimately to a series of deaths. In the beginning Antigone is a close minded character who later becomes open minded. After the death of her brothers, Eteocles and Polyneices, Creon becomes the ruler of Thebes. He decides that Eteocles will receive a funeral with military honors because he fought for his country. However, Polyneices, who broke his exile to " spill the blood of his father and sell his own people into slavery", will have no burial. Antigone disagrees with Creon's unjust actions and says, " Creon is not strong enough to stand in my way." She vows to bury her brother so that his soul may gain the peace of the underworld. Antigone is torn between the law placed against burying her brother and her own thoughts of doing what she feels should be done for her family. Her intent is simply to give her brother, Polyneices, a proper burial so that she will follow "the laws of the gods." Antigone knows that she is in danger of being killed for her actions and she says, "I say that this crime is holy: I shall lie down with him in death, and I shall be as dear to him as he to me." Her own laws, or morals, drive her to break Creon's law placed against Polyneices burial. Even after she realizes that she will have to bury Polyneices without the help of her sister, Ismene, she says: Go away, Ismene: I shall be hating you soon, and the dead will too, For your words are hateful. Leave me my foolish plan: I am not afraid of the danger; if it means death, It will not be the worst of deaths-death without honor. Here Ismene is trying to reason with Antigone by saying that she cannot disobey the law because of the consequences. Antigone is close-minded when she immediately tells her to go away and refuses to listen to her. Later in the play, Antigone is sorrowful for her actions and the consequences yet she is not regretful for her crime. She says her crime is just, yet she does regret being forced to commit it.
Sophocles play titled Antigone, embellishes the opposing conflicts between Antigone who stands for the values of family, and Creon who stands for the values of state. Sophocles explores the depths of Antigone’s morality and the duty based on consequence throughout the play, as well as the practical consequences of Creon who is passionate and close-minded. Although Antigone’s moral decisions appear to be more logical and favorable than Creon’s, a personal argument would be that both characters’ decisions in society can be equally justified.
Choosing to follow authority and the law is admirable and important in order to have a stable society; however, prioritizing family over all is imbedded in humanity. Family is part of one’s identity and greatly affects one's morals and opinions. If a person solely lives a rigid life, following authority over family, then compassion and the ability to be flexible is lost. Sophocles poses if authority or family is superior through the characters Antigone and Creon as their actions and opinions drastically contrast. Creon puts more importance on his rule and the law, while Antigone emphasizes the devotion to her bloodline and the gods. Antigone, although depicting that authority and the king’s rule is important, puts more importance
In the play Antigone, created by Sophocles Antigone is a foil to Creon because their personalities contrast. This makes Creon a Tragic Hero because he thinks that he is a god but in reality he is a mortal upsetting the god's and he will eventually meet his demise. At the start of the play the reader is introduced to a character named Creon, who is the king of Thebes, the previous king, Eteocles, was killed by his brother Polyneices. There is a law arranged by Creon, so nobody could bury the body of Polyneices but Antigone, the sister of both Eteocles and Polyneices, wants to bury her brother and is willing to risk her life to bury him. She eventually gets caught and is sentenced to death by Creon.
In the struggle between Creon and Antigone, Sophocles' audience would have recognized a genuine conflict of duties and values. From the Greek point of view, both Creon's and Antigone's positions are flawed, because both oversimplify ethical life by recognizing only one kind of good or duty. By oversimplifying, each ignores the fact that a conflict exists at all, or that deliberation is necessary. Moreover, both Creon and Antigone display the dangerous flaw of pride in the way they justify and carry out their decisions. Antigone admits right from the beginning that she wants to carry out the burial because the action is glorious. Antigone has a savage spirit; she has spent most of her life burying her family members.
He fells that people are already starting to do that at the beginning of his rule and says, “there have been those who have whispered together, stiff-necked anarchists, putting their heads together, scheming against me in the alleys” (i 113-115). His paranoia causes him to feel that people are plotting against him, which causes him to not accept input from other people. Because he is so clear that he does not want rebellion, Creon is very unhappy when Antigone buries Polyneices and feels that this is some form of rebellion. Instead of just accusing Antigone of the illegal burial, Creon blames her for “a double insolence, breaking the given laws and boasting of it” (ii 80-81). Though Antigone never boasted about defying the law, Creon is so self-conscious that he sees the act as much more than it really is. Finally, Creon does realize that he must break away from his ignorant ways. By the time he realizes that he should “not fight with destiny” (v 101) and that “the laws of the Gods are mighty” (v 108), it is too late. He was too oblivious and caught up in his own self-consciousness that he was not able to make the right decision quickly enough. Though Creon did eventually understand his mistakes, it was not enough to save him from the wrath of the
The classic plays of Ancient Greece are characterized by their use of hamartia to teach the audience not to make the same mistakes as the tragic hero. Hamartia and tragic flaws, such as hubris, are seen throughout Sophocles’ Antigone. However, the tragedy experienced in the play is all caused by one character’s flaw which causes a domino effect that leads to the ruin of the entire kingdom. Creon’s tragic flaw, his hubris and pride, is what essentially causes the demise of the other characters. His struggle to protect the lives of his family and kingdom all backfires as the rest of the characters, instead, chose death and honor than to defy the gods and live. This clash between life and death begins long before the start of
Antigone, as a character, is extremely strong-willed and loyal to her faith. Creon is similarly loyal, but rather to his homeland, the city of Thebes, instead of the gods. Both characters are dedicated to a fault, a certain stubbornness that effectively blinds them from the repercussions of their actions. Preceding the story, Antigone has been left to deal with the burden of her parents’ and both her brothers’ deaths. Merely a young child, intense grief is to be expected; however, Antigone’s emotional state is portrayed as frivolous when it leads her to directly disobey Creon’s orders. She buries her brother Polynices because of her obedience to family and to the gods, claiming to follow “the gods’ unfailing, unwritten laws” (Sophocles 456-457). CONTINUE
Although Antigone has a bad reputation with Creon, and possibly Ismene, for being insubordinate, she stays true to her values throughout the entire play by following the law of gods, not so that she could appease them, but because she admired its value of honor and respect to loved ones that have passed away. This devotion and determination to give her brother a proper burial shows the true essence of her being: that loyalty to family is in fact hold above all else.
Antigone holds her love of family, and respect to the dead, elevated beyond the laws of Creon, whom she believes, has no righteous justification to close his eyes to the honor of the deceased. In her determination to fulfill Polynices' rights, she runs directly into Creon's attempts to re-establish order. This leads to encounters of severe conflict between the dissimilarities of the two, creating a situation whereby both Creon and Antigone expose their stubbornness and self will.
Antigone’s strength allows her to defend her brother’s honor against Creon, who wants to make a statement about traitors. However, both Antigone and King Creon commit faults while trying to protect the things they love. Antigone should not have died for her beliefs as it puts her loved ones and community in danger, and Creon should not have forbidden the burial of Polyneices as it angers the Gods and causes him great suffering in the end.
Creon in the play Antigone by Sophocles plays a major role within the play. Antigone also plays an important role, as these two character’s conflicting views led to utter disaster, which highlights Creon as a tragic figure. Within the play Creon attempted to establish decisions for the common good; however, his decisions resulted in tragedy. Creon highlighted as the tragic figure, initially created decisions he thought were for the welfare and well-being of Thebes. However, Antigone, who rebelled against Creon’s decisions, caused Creon’s rage to cloud his rational way of thinking.
Antigone’s views of divine justice conflict with Creon’s will as head of the state. Two brothers fighting against one another in Thebes’ civil war died while fighting one another for the throne. Creon, who had become the new ruler of Thebes, decided that one brother Eteocles would be honored, while Polyneices would be put through public shame. The body of Polyneices was to not be sanctified by holy rites, but was planned to be left unburied on the battlefield for animals to prey on it. Antigone, the sister of the two brothers wants to properly bury Polyneices’ body, but in doing so she would by defying king Creon’s edict. When Creon’s orders the Sentry to find out who had buried the body of Polyneices, Antigone is found to have buried the body of her dead brother. Since she disobeyed authority, her and her sister are temporarily imprisoned. He then wishes to spare Antigone’s sister Ismene and bury Antigone alive in a cave. To some up the foregoing, in honoring her brother she is performing the role of woman and warrior...
Creon has declared that anyone who goes against him and buries Polyneices, will be killed. Antigone knows that it is her moral duty to give her brother a proper burial, despite what Creon believes. Disregarding Creon’s threats, Antigone holds her duty to the gods and to her family higher than her duty to Creon. The strong willed and determined Antigone decides to grant her brother a proper burial, in spite of Ismene’s cautious advice and Creon’s threats. As reported by the sentry, “ She was not afraid, not even when we charged her with what she had done. She denied nothing…To escape from death.” Antigone’s actions show the satisfaction she feels by fulfilling her moral duty. She declares, “This death of mind is of no importance; but if I had left my bother lying in death unburied, I should have suffered. Now I do not.” Antigone’s disregard for laws made by man and Creon, gave her peace of mind because she regards her moral duty and divine law above anything