Sophocles Antigone's Obsession With Death

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Antigone’s Obsession with Death Antigone’s fixation with death is clearly presented throughout the play. In Antigone, Sophocles describes as the reverse of a typical tragic heroine. This opposition to classically-feminine roles in tragedy especially presents itself most prominently in her morbid fascination with death. Through Antigone’s death-obsessed suffering, Sophocles explains that dwelling on the past is harmful to one’s growth into a well-functioning adult.
When Antigone speaks with her sister Ismene about burying their brother, Ismene urges her not to, fearful of disobeying the law of Kreon. But Antigone argues against her saying: “…leave me alone, with my hopeless scheme; I’m ready to suffer for it and die. Let me. No suffering could …show more content…

The characters also change throughout the tragedy. Antigone is different than most female characters. She doesn’t change, but she is stubborn enough to stick to the only thing that she needs, and becoming blindsided to everyone else around her, and this is her tragic flaw: she’s undeniably depressed. Everything, according to Antigone, is gone from her life and nothing matters. In Antigone’s last scene alive, she argues with Kreon. Her every counterpoint to which Kreon says is just her talking of her utter demise. When she speaks with her sister Ismene, she is quite heartless; essentially, Ismene is trying to protect Antigone by saying she is sharing the blame for burying Polyneices: “I share the blame with her and will bear it also.” (line 558). She is so concerned with her sister she would rather die in her place, just to see Antigone alive and glad to start her new life. Antigone is abandoning the only sibling she has left, and by going to the underworld Ismene will have no one. Antigone is so infatuated with killing herself and wanting to see her family again that she forgets she still has some family left; and they are alive. Antigone’s last words are “Be happy. You are living; but my soul died long ago, to be useful among the dead.” (lines

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