Antigone Tragic Hero Essay

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    Jake Beidler Mrs. Voshell Honors English 10 5 May 2017 The Tragedy of Julius Caesar, more like The Tragedy of Brutus The Tragedy of Julius Caesar is one of the better known, yet lesser understood theater installments by William Shakespeare in the Sixteenth Century. The play was first performed September 21, 1599 in the Globe Theatre in London, England. In the play there are many different and unique characters, some complex, some simple. Marcus Junius Brutus the Younger, better known as Brutus,

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    Eva Young once said, “To think too long about doing a thing often becomes its undoing.” The play Hamlet written by William Shakespeare exemplifies this quote as it showcases Hamlet’s never ending battle with procrastination. The story follows the tragic hero, and Price of Denmark, Hamlet, whose father has just been murdered and his mission to get revenge for it. The play opens with the words “who’s there?” (Shakespeare 1.1.1), being a question, this establishes the underlying tone of the play and of

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    suffered by losing their reputations, their sanity, and their kingdoms. These are two great examples of what a tragic character displays, according to Aristotle’s conception. Aristotle’s definition of a tragic hero is a distinguished person occupying a high position, living in prosperous circumstances and falling into misfortune because of an error in judgment. King Oedipus and Queen Dido are tragic characters that suffered equally, because they both unconsciously disrupted with a designated future, became

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    Deconstructing Tragedy and the Definition of the Protagonist’s Innocence In Sophocles’ Oedipus Rex, Oedipus meets the Aristotelian definition of a tragic hero as divine fate and tragic flaws lead to his downfall. Oedipus’s tragic flaws like hubris, curiosity, and anger, contribute to his unfortunate fate. The components of a perfect tragedy as defined in Aristotle’s Poetics are at the center of Oedipus Rex. The play contains the elements of a perfect tragedy

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    Section II: Counterarguments Free Will and Hamartia Counterargument #1: P. H. Vellacott for Free Will Many classicists believe that Oedipus’s fall is due to his Free will and the decisions he makes. Those who hold this belief hold that Oedipus made his own decisions, which is what led to his fall and that he was not compelled by some external source. P. H. Vellacott is a strong supporter of this theory. As such, in his famous essay, “The Guilt of Oedipus,” Vellacott argues that, factually speaking

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    As defined by Aristotle, A tragic hero is a literary character who makes a judgment error that inevitably leads to his or her own destruction. In the play “Hamlet” by William Shakespeare, Prince Hamlet is the tragic hero. Prince Hamlet can even be considered a quintessential tragic hero due to how closely he relates to Aristotle’s definition. Initially he has noble motives which were to avenge his father’s death but by the end, his flaws and bad decisions lead him to his death. The fact that Prince

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    (Tasca, Rapetti, Carta, Fadda 2012). While many authors use madwomen to signify tragedy, William Shakespeare focuses specifically on the downfall of noblewomen. In Hamlet and Macbeth, Shakespeare utilizes spiritual allusions, feminine imagery, and tragic inversion to transition from a sympathetic to unsympathetic view of the downfall of women in concordance with the changing of hands of the English throne. Through the use of spiritual allusions, Shakespeare depicts Ophelia as divine and Lady Macbeth

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    Julius Caesar and Brutus are more similar than meets the eye. One could argue that both Julius and Brutus are tragic heroes in the tragic play Julius Caesar. This argument is false because Brutus is the one, and only, tragic hero. Brutus is the tragic hero because he possesses the heroic qualities of equality and respect, integrity, and concern for his county, as well as possessing a tragic flaw, which is his own naivety. Heroic qualities can be hard to define, but to simply put it, they are the defining

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    Fitzgerald once said, “Show me a hero and I’ll give write you a tragedy.” Since Shakespeare’s play Julius Caesar Is a tragedy, this quote relates directly to it, being a tragedy that has heroes in it, or those that appear to be heroes. One element of tragedies is that in the cast, there is almost always a tragic hero. A tragic hero is a hero, usually a protagonist, that has some sort of fatal flaw that is the character’s downfall. However, there are two different tragic heroes in the play Julius Caesar

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    Brutus from Julius Caesar and Macbeth, the protagonist from the play Macbeth by Shakespeare, are both Tragic Heros that died tragic deaths, having fallen from great heights, and having made irreversible mistakes, which made them that have significant outcomes to both of their lives, with both leading into consequences. This is shown for both of the Tragic Heroes throughout their story. Brutus a high-ranking, well-regarded Roman nobleman that killed Julius Caesar, went to the top of the ranks and

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