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Theme Of Gods In Antigone

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The thought that one idea has total power over a society is truly riveting. During Greek times, gods influenced every little aspect of the culture because they have so much domination. Greeks always wanted to make sure that they were happy, because if they were not, the gods would punish them in a cruel way. The theme of excess devotion is exemplified throughout Sophocles’ tragedies, The Three Theban Plays- Antigone, Oedipus the King, and Oedipus at Colonus to prove that by not following the gods’ ideals can cause these deities to get too upset and punish people.
Creon, the newly crowned king of Thebes, devotes himself to being an almighty king in Antigone. He obtained the power after both heirs to the throne die, and as time goes on, he becomes hubris about himself. Creon assumes that because he is the king, he has unlimited power to do whatever he wants, such as creating a law. When a well-respected prophet, Tiresias, comes along to try to correct Creon’s ways, Creon is so prideful that he insolences Tiresias. As Tiresias tries to explain the prophecy that beholds Creon’s fate, Creon rebuttals by saying, “No…all men fall, it’s only human, but the wisest fall obscenely when they glorify obscene advice with rhetoric- all for their own gain” (Sophocles, Antigone 113). Creon calls Tiresias’s prophecies a lie and says that Tiresias does not know what he is talking about. He doesn’t have the authority to tell a well-respected prophet what is true versus what is a lie, but Creon

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