Sunday, March 24, 2019

Sophocles Antigone - The Stubborn Antigone and Creon :: Antigone essays

The Tragic Duo of Antigone and Kreon                    In the work out Antigone, both Antigone and Kreon could be considered tragical heros. A tragic hero, defined by A Dictionary of Literary, Dramatic and Cinematic Terms, is someone who suffers due to a tragic flaw, or hamartia. This Greek word is variously translated as tragic flaw or error or weakness. Kreons hamartia, like in many plays, is hybris - Greek for overweening pride, arrogance, or excessive confidence. Kreons hybris causes him to attempt to snap off the laws of order or human rights, another master(prenominal) part of a tragic hero. Also, like all tragic heroes, Kreon suffers because of his hamartia and then realizes his flaw. The whimsey that Antigone is the hero is a strong one, but there is a stronger touch that Kreon, the Ruler of Thebes, is the true protagonist. Kreons main and foremost hamartia was his hybris, or his innate pride. K reon was a new king, and he would never let anyone prove him slander or let anyone change his mind once it was made. One main event that showed Kreons hamartia and also caused the catastrophe was when he asked his son Haimon, who was act to marry Antigone, if he still loves his father. Haimon says he respects Kreons ruling, but he feels, in this case, that Kreon was wrong. Haimon asks his father to take his advice and not have Antigone executed, but, because of Kreons hybris, Kreon gets furious and makes the pip worse then it already was. He was way to a fault high to take advice from someone younger, and in his anger he decided to push d suffer Antigone right away in front of Haimons eyes. Just understand You dont insult me and go off laughing. Bring her here Let him see her. Kill her here, beside her bridegroom (Sophocles 919-921). This was too much for Haimon to take, and he runs out of the room, yelling, ...her death will destroy others (Sophocles 908). blind by his pride and arrogance, Kreon takes that remark as a threat to himself, nescient that it wasnt directed to himself, but was a suicide threat by his own son. Another example of Kreons tragic pride is when the prophet, Teiresias, travels all the way to Thebes to dissever Kreon very important news, but Kreon pride makes him ignore it and he accuses Teiresias of macrocosm bribed.

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