Friday, May 31, 2019

Antigone, Empress of Byzantium, and My Aunt :: Antigone Essays

Antigone, Empress of Byzantium, and My AuntI have very few heroes, that if I could pick three people who are heroic to me, I would have to choose Antigone from the tragic play Antigone by Sophocles, Theodora, Empress of Byzantium, and my own personal hero, my bully aunt Alice. All of these women have had a profound effect on the world around them, and worked hard to shape the world as they saw fit, to nourish their loved ones and those to whom they were and are loyal. My personal hero especially has had a profound effect on my upbringing and me. While I have few heroes, I will pick some people from the past, present, and literature to represent what I believe a hero should be. The first hero is Antigone from the well-known Greek tragedy Antigone, written by Sophocles of an older Greek myth. Antigone was not only a hero, but also a martyr. She died for her cause she died to save the honor and soul of her associate Polynices, even though he was a traitor. She defied the order of t he main antagonist Creon, or Kreon, whose edict was that no one should bury Polynices body, or even grieve his passing. (Antigone) On the other hand, her other brother who had seized the thrown after Oedipuss passing, was buried with honor and as a hero. Antigone would not stand for this, as both her sustain and father were dead, and thusly she would never have any other brothers ever again. She did not want either of her brothers bodies to be, left as a corpse eaten by birds and dogs and torn to pieces, shameful for everyone to see, because this would bring more shame to her family then had already been brought by her father, who had killed his own father unknowingly and married his own mother. This is one designer that Antigone is dangerous and heroic, she remembers the past, unlike Creon, who unwittingly begins to repeat the mistakes of Oedipus in his reign, and Antigone uses this information as well as any sword master as a tool against Creon. She knows that she will be put to death, however she faces up to that and defends her brother anyway, and is unafraid of the consequences. She even makes Creons orders seem shameful, putting them up in a classic tilt between divine and human law, making it clear that the will of her gods is more important then life or death.

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