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How Does Aristotle Change In Antigone

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According to Aristotle’s definition, a tragic figure commits a mistaken act because of his or her hamartia and that action leads to a change in fortune from happiness to misery. Though Antigone did suffer an unfortunate change in fortune, the actions that led to it were not by mistake. This is obvious because everyone except for Creon supports her actions. When the sentry turns Antigone in to Creon as the criminal, he explains how when he and the other soldiers caught her she denied nothing and how this brought him both comfort and pain “for it is…no great pleasure to bring death to a friend” (207). When Creon confronts Antigone himself, Antigone tells Creon that the people support her, “but they keep their tongues in leash” (210). She knows …show more content…

In this case, one may argue that Creon is evil because he sentences Antigone to death after she did the right thing. However, Creon is simply proud and stubborn. His actions are not guided by malevolent thoughts. After he hears Teiresias’ prophecy, he realizes what he has done wrong and how his pride, his hamartia, blinded him. He cries, “Oh it is hard to give in! but it is worse to risk everything for stubborn pride” (235). Creon also gets a punishment much worse than what he deserves. He loses both his wife and his son to suicide. Haimon is so “driven mad by the murder his father had done” (239) that he first tries to murder his father and then he kills himself. The queen also kills herself and the guard informs Creon that “her last breath was a curse for [Megareus’ and Haimon’s] father, the murderer of her sons” (243). Creon is so grieved by this that he sees no comfort, crying “I look for comfort; my comfort lies here dead…Fate has brought all my pride to a thought of dust” (245). Though he did commit a terrible action, he didn’t deserve to lose all of his family. Creon received a punishment much worse than what he deserved, while Antigone received punishment when she deserved none. Her death was an honorable one. For this reason, the audience feels more pity for Creon. Because Creon receives a punishment larger than what he deserves and this invokes pity from the audience, he better fits Aristotle’s definition of a tragic

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