Friday, September 20, 2019
Creon and Antigone as Tragic Heroes in Sophocles Antigone :: Antigone essays
      Creon and Antigone as Tragic Heroes                 Creon and Antigone, main characters in the Greek tragedy Antigone by  Sophocles share some of the same characteristics that make up a tragic hero, but  to varying degrees. Antigone, daughter of her mother/grandmother, Jocasta, and  father, Oedipus is head strong, proud, and stubborn. She had three siblings,  Ismene her sister, and two brothers Eteocles and Polyneices who found there  deaths at the end of each others sword in battle over which would become king of  Thebes. Antigone's pride fullness and loyalty is revealed when Polyneices is  denied proper burial by her uncle and king Creon. The two buttheads in the  political for Creon and personal for Antigone situation and bring about the  downfall of the royal family.            Aristotle's view on a tragic hero is someone that would have to be held in  high standards (royalty) in order to evoke compassion and anxiety in the  audience. Creon and Antigone are royalty and share the most important aspect of  a tragic hero, each have a tragic flaw. Both of the two characters have an  inability to compromise or even reason with. Antigone's tragic flaw was  amplified by her loyalty for her brother; she acted irrational, in not taking  preparation or thoroughness into consideration when burying her brother. Further  more when confronted by Creon, himself she disrespected and basically told him  to silence himself because his words were "distasteful" to her. So then sealing  her death by becoming an immediate martyr for the wrong cause... anything  against Creon's will.            Creon, in his paranoia was plagued with the feeling of incompetence and need  to establish dominance. His decree that no one would bury Polyneices only  provoked the people of Thebes into thinking of him as insensitive to their  culture. When his ruling was disobeyed, only led him to him to believe that  conspiracy was about and that no matter, family or not, he would punish  Antigone, causing a chain reaction of events causing the loss of his entire  family, except Ismene. Leaving the audience experiencing pity and fear for both  characters.            Neither Creon nor Antigone, were either all bad or all good. Creon while  tyrant like only wanted Thebes to flourish, Antigone while showing honor to her  brother never stopped to really consider the effect that her actions would have  on others.  					    
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