Significance of the Women in Antigone Michael J. O’Brien in the Introduction to Twentieth Century Interpretations of Oedipus Rex, maintains that there is “a good deal of evidence to support this view” that the fifth century playwright was the “educator of his people” and a “teacher” (4). Sophocles in his tragedy Antigone teaches about “morally desirable attitudes and behavior,” (4) and uses a woman as heroine and another woman in a supporting role to do most of the instructing
involved in the conflict are Antigone and Creon. Creon has a bad way of treating women. Creon believes women can not have the same equal rights as men. He tries to kill his sister because he does not want to be proven wrong by his sister. Antigone wants to be acknowledge by her family and have very high honor. “Creon was treating antigone wrong because of their religion they believed women could not have the same equal rights as men”. Men have a higher role to play than women. They are responsible for
Have you ever wondered what women were like before the liberation movement of the 1970s? In the plays Antigone, by Sophocles, and A Doll’s House, by Henrik Ibsen, women are represented as weak, underlings to men. However, both protagonists in the play, Antigone and Nora, show their strength and courage when they go against society. Antigone shows how strong she is when she goes against the King’s decree and buries her brother who is a traitor. Nora, to save her husband’s life, takes out a loan which
human.” These concepts are stating the opposite ideas of what Antigone is going through during her lifetime. The roles of women were not large, limited to say the least, as well as their authority. Women were seen as inferior beings when compared to men, lesser and not as powerful. 400 B.C. was a time period that gave little to no choices for women, allowing minimal movement and opposition of the tyrannical rule of men. The role of women in Antigone’s time are seen as less significant; they lack the
Women have always played a small role in many ancient societies such as: Ancient Rome, the Elizabethan Era, and the Middle Ages. Greek tragedies are written about their society and are a dramatic example of life during this time. In Antigone, the play is written about Greek society while including the role of women. Antigone is a classic Greek tragedy written by Sophocles that shows life and the role of women during Ancient Greek society through the characters Ismene and Antigone. Creon is very
It’s extraordinarily apparent that throughout the course of both oral and written history, women have been on the short end of the stick. During the Early Modern Europe, roughly between the late fifteenth and late eighteenth century, European countries were on a witch craze. Women, although some men too, were often accused of consorting with the devil and performing magic, and then sentenced to death if they were unable to prove their innocence, burning being the most popular form of punishment.
ancient times mention the lives of the upper-class males, whether it be senators, emperors, poets, or philosophers. Only recently has the study of women and lower status people a viable research field. Some of Euripides’s and Sophocles’ most popular plays feature female heroines alongside female villains. These plays potentially shed light on the lives of women
Women who tend to venture towards the masculine side of the scale tend to be ridiculed and classified as a tomboy. In the play Antigone, the protagonist, the title character, acts out of her feminine role in society resulting in her own death. To demonstrate her loyalty to her disimular family she disobeys Creon, the king. Angry a woman would ever cross him, Creon reacts violently in fear that if a women were able to disobey his rules, men could do so easier. Women were not seen as equals when compared
of literature, as well as any forms of media, women have been marginalized. Women are subject to a lack of characterization and/or typical female tropes, suggesting that they cannot progress mentally, reach their own realizations, as well as have their own identities. In addition, women are commonly showcased as flat characters, fulfilling typical gender roles and only serving to progress the plot for more dominant male characters. Sophocles’ Antigone includes both the lack of characterization
worldwide have no women in senior management. This is because many countries are still not comfortable with women in the position of power. The leadership in Sophocles’ Antigone and Euripides’ Medea is the exact same way. Comparatively, not one women in these books has a leadership role. At one point, Creon, a character in Medea, even says he would never let a women rule above him. Through the degrading actions men take against women and women’s exaggerated reactions and emotions, women in Medea and Antigone