Saturday, December 21, 2019

The Tragic Criteria Present in Antigone by Sophocles

A tragic story has its own occur of events. The main factors that always end a tragedy is through conspiracies, love, or hatred. In the story Antigone written by Sophocles, it demonstrates a tragedy filled with consequences to the characters. Antigone shows similarities to Aristotle’s paradigm because of the plot, characterization, and actions that were pursued throughout this story. In Aristotle’s Poetics, he puts his view of how a tragedy should be portrayed to make the concept of it more understandable towards the audience. Through the usages of Aristotle’s criteria it will help analyze topics that demonstrates the views of Aristotle. One criteria that associates with Aristotle’s paradigm is that a character’s thought is what leads†¦show more content†¦Haemon’s death was successful in causing King Creon to realize that he had lost everything. The warning that Haemon gave to his father was ignored and when Antigone died, Haemon mad e sure that his father would get what he deserved. Another criteria from Aristotle’s paradigm is that pity and fear should be included towards the incidents that occur in a story. One example of that portrays this criteria is when Antigone and Ismene heard about both of their brothers death. It was devastating to know that their brother Polyneices would not get a burial at all because of his crime of waging war against his own country while Eteocles was given the best recognition for saving their country and a proper burial. Antigone wanted both of her brothers to receive a burial, so she decided to go against King Creon’s law of not giving Polyneices a burial. Although this law would mean a death sentence, Antigone was willing to go through with it. When King Creon heard that someone had buried Polyneices’s body, he became furious and wanted that person captured. King Creon discovered that it was Antigone who had disobeyed his rule of not burying Polyneicesâ⠂¬â„¢s body. This made him pity her and her family, especially Antigone’s father, Oedipus, because he had married his own mother and killed his own biological father. King Creon saw them as a disgrace and it was no surprise that their family was so corrupted. This example demonstrated the pity that King Creon hadShow MoreRelatedEssay on Creon as the Tragic Hero in Sophocles Antigone1326 Words   |  6 PagesCreon as the Tragic Hero in Antigone     Ã‚   This essay will compare two of the characters in â€Å"Antigone†, Antigone and Creon, in an effort to determine the identity of the tragic hero in this tale.   Ã‚  Ã‚  Ã‚  Ã‚  Ã‚  Ã‚  Ã‚  Ã‚  Ã‚  Ã‚   To identify the tragic hero in Sophocles’ renowned play â€Å"Antigone†, we should first consider both the elements present in Greek tragedies and what characteristics define a tragic hero. Aristotle’s definition of tragedy is: â€Å"Tragedy is a story taking the hero from happiness to miseryRead MoreSophocles Antigone And The Self Isolation Of The Tragic Hero1724 Words   |  7 Pages Sophocles’ Antigone sets the stage of divine law versus civic law and men versus women puppeteering morality. As a cautionary tale of the 5th century, the text studies the clear distinction between Polios (public life) to Oikos (private life) and the dangers one faces when amalgamating the two. In Antigone religious fundamentalism is in battle with Creon’s stubborn grasp over the importance of showing his people the type of leader he is through his subsequent double blasphemy of letting Polynice’sRead MoreHow Does Humanity Still Afford The Time?1422 Words   |  6 Pagesof this is Aristotle. Despite living in a time when not many means were available, he effectively constructed a definition that allows humanity to fully comprehend tragic heroes of drama. Using Aristotle’s criteria, one can identify Sophocles’s antagonist, Creon, as a tragic hero. Creon complies with Aristotle’s definition of a tragic hero by possessing high status in his society and being neither all benign nor all evil. He fulfills the first of these requirements by being the king of Thebes. AfterRead MoreThe Tragedy Of Sophocles Antigone Essay1808 Words   |  8 Pages Antigone is the main character of the homonymous tragedy of Sophocles. The play follows the formal conventions of Greek tragedy and it is composed of seven scenes (opening scene, prologos), five scenes and a final scene (exodus), which are divided noticeably by six choral songs (opening lyric, parodos) and five choral songs (stasima) which have some relevance to the dramatic situation. As Aristotle distinguishes in his work of literary criticism, Poetics, part of the excitement of a tragic performanceRead MoreAuthority versus Truth in Sophocles Antigone and Shakespeares Twelfth Night2444 Words   |  10 Pagesâ€Å"Authority cannot afford to connive at disobedience† writes Sophocles in Antigone. This is also a central concern to Aristotle who establishes the importance of ‘Authority’ in the opening lines of his treatise Poltics: â€Å"Since we see that every city-state is a sort of community and that every community is established for the sake of some good†¦it is clear that every community aims at some good, and the community which has the most authority of all and includes all the others aims highest, that is

No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.