Saturday, July 20, 2019
Change Within Characters in Sophocles Antigone Essay examples -- Soph
Change Within Characters in Sophocles' Antigone      Antigone is about how King Creon rules that Polynices the traitor is  not to be buried, but his sister Antigone defies the order. She is  caught, and sentenced by Creon to be buried alive - even though she is  betrothed to his son Haemon. After the blind prophet Tiresias proves  that the gods are on Antigone's side, Creon changes his mind - but too  late. He goes first to bury Polynices, but Antigone has already hanged  herself. When Creon arrives at the tomb, Haemon attacks him and then  kills himself. When the news of their death is reported, Creon's wife  Eurydice takes her own life. Creon is alone in his life, full of  guilt.    The major characters in Antigone in my opinion are Antigone and Creon.  Both undergo very major dramatic changes in their life. Antigoneââ¬â¢s  changes are mainly linked to the themes of the position of women as a  Greek and the theme of the individual versus the state and divine law  versus human law. Creonââ¬â¢s changes are mainly linked to the themes  Conscience versus Law and the threat of tyranny. Both of their changes  to themselves also inflict a change on the other. Both also undergo  changes because of their pride and what actions it causes them to do.    Pride and its effects are a central part of Antigone. It is a trait  despised by the gods, who bring suffering to the proud, but to the  Greek mind pride is also a part of greatness. Both Antigone and Creon  are incredibly proud, making it impossible for either one of them to  back down once they have taken a stand. Pride is part of what makes  Antigone heroic. Creon realizes that in the end when he is completely  alone in his life because everyone is dead. His pride had caused him  to lose everyth...              ... despicable if the order of the state demands  it. Antigone's insistence on her desire in face of state power brings  ruin into Thebes and to Creon specifically. With the death of his  family, Creon is left utterly alone in the palace. His throne even  robs him of his mourning, the king and his pace sadly shuttling off to  a cabinet meeting after the announcement of the family's deaths.    Antigone and Creon both undergo many changes to their personality,  their beliefs, and their ways of living. But in the end it is only  Creon who has the ability to change his life and keep on living it in  a more respectable and more understanding way. But Creon has to live  with the deaths and his fatal mistakes that he has made. Antigone has  a very short time to adapt to the changes in her life but she does not  see much point because she has been sentenced to a very slow death.                      
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