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Civil Disobedience In Antigone

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The Issues of Civil Disobedience: Antigone and the Civil Rights Movement Civil disobedience has been a controversial and key component in achieving social justice. Although civil disobedience can lead to benefits such as social justice, there are many issues and consequences that can arise. These issues are noted throughout history, literature, and culture. For example, Sophocles’ Antigone mentions issues that are faced with civil disobedience. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s “Letter from a Birmingham Jail” demonstrates the issues of civil disobedience during the Civil Rights Movement. In fact, many of the issues Antigone faces align with the claims presented in Dr. King’s letter. Although Antigone and Dr. King’s reasons for civil disobedience …show more content…

These issues are present when she makes the decision bury her deceased brother, Polynices, even though it was against King Creon’s ordinance. Burying her brother shows she clearly chose her own beliefs against human law. This is shown in the quotation “It is not for him to keep me from my own.” (Blondell) This quotation uncovers that Antigone would rather follow her own beliefs that King Creon’s. She also chooses to defy human law with religious reasons. Antigone states the the gods have told her to bury Polynices, so she does stating that she “shall be a criminal – but a religious one.” (Blondell) When Antigone chooses to go against the law, she makes it clear that she is ready to face the consequences that comes with it. She is aware that she will die from actions and believes that “It will be good to die.” (Blondell) Antigone deals with this issue by deciding that defying the law is worth …show more content…

King claims that “there are two types of laws: there are just laws and there are unjust laws.” (King) According to King, a just law is a law that follows morals or the law of God, while an unjust law does not. King believes that laws can be broken in non-violent actions, such as peaceful protests, to correct unjust laws. The issue of determining whether the consequences of breaking the law are worth it are present in the fact that he wrote this letter in jail and in the end of his letter when he commends the extreme civil rights demonstrators for their “sublime courage, willingness to suffer, and their amazing discipline in the midst of the most inhuman provocation.”

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