Sophocles

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    of Antigone, Sophocles had participated in one of these festivals and won the award for his performance. He did not become known as one of the greatest playwrights then. Only now is he thought of as one of the greatest playwrights during the greek era. The point of this paper is to show how the chorus in Greek Theater tragedy performances affect the way the play Antigone is performed. Through the use of mask, staging, and speech, Sophocles best distinguishes the chorus. Sophocles most famous

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    Sophocles’ Antigone is based on the idea of fate and the conflict if free will exists or not. While Sophocles agrees that free will exists to a certain degree, morality plays a role in determining how much fate can be changed. Unlike modern-day American culture, which emphasizes individual freedom of choices, the Ancient Greeks thought that life was predetermined by the Gods’ will and laws. In Antigone, Sophocles uses the theme of a tragedy, to emphasize the limitations of human knowledge and wisdom

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    In the play Antigone, Sophocles, the author, was more lenient and favorable towards Antigone, as opposed to Kreon and the chorus because she showed more heroic characteristics as opposed to the other two characters. Antigone goes against the normal human being at the time who would have just listen to Kreon, but instead she decided to stand up for her family over herself. On line 26 Antigone initially starts to think about why only one of her brothers was buried, “It’s the burial. It’s our brothers:

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    Antigone are both honorable people and yet, both are fatally proud and that is the source of the tragedy. To what extent do you agree? During the time of Ancient Greece, tragic plays were commonly used to deliver a moral message to their audience. Sophocles’ “Antigone” demonstrates the dangers of hubris and the disaster it can cause using the conflict between the two central characters, Antigone and Creon, as the basis of the tragedy. Although they are honourable in their own different ways, Antigone

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    In Antigone, Sophocles introduces the struggle between loyalty to civil law versus familial loyalty and divine law, which is a central conflict in the play. Antigone has a firm belief in upholding family values and honoring the gods and deceased by burying her brother. In contrast, Creon wants to do what is best for the city which is, in his opinion, forbidding the burial of Polynices. Both Antigone and Creon believe that their point of view is more important, and neither is willing to change perspective

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    with the commitment that she is to have to her community and indirectly, her king. Ultimately, I will argue that Sophocles demonstrated his values of family, the way of the gods, and doing what is right through Antigone’s response to the conflicts between her values and the commitment she is meant to have towards her community. Within the first few hundred lines of Antigone, Sophocles shapes the reader’s perception of Antigone and her philosophical beliefs. When speaking to her sister, Ismene, about

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    Sophocles’ Antigone sets the stage of divine law versus civic law and men versus women puppeteering morality. As a cautionary tale of the 5th century, the text studies the clear distinction between Polios (public life) to Oikos (private life) and the dangers one faces when amalgamating the two. In Antigone religious fundamentalism is in battle with Creon’s stubborn grasp over the importance of showing his people the type of leader he is through his subsequent double blasphemy of letting Polynice’s

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    Why is the play called the Electra and not the Orestes? That is, in what way does Sophocles make Electra, and not Orestes, the focus of his play? Three great Athenian tragic poets – Aeschylus, Sophocles and Euripides – addressed to the myth about the killing of Clytemnestra by Orestes. Sophocles's Electra is one of the interpretations of this legend. Although the avenging one is Orestes, Sophocles brings Electra to the fore because of her endless hatred and the will to take her revenge against her

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    and reversal. This ancient concept and theory are still highly discussed and used to analyze numerous pieces of literature to this day. One piece that could be considered as an “ideal tragedy” is the play “Oedipus the King” written by Sophocles. In this play, Sophocles utilizes the concept of tragedy as well the theory of the importance of scenes of recognition and reversal to create a setting, tone, and mood throughout the play. Oedipus, the mythical king of

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    When people are controlled by higher powers, such as gods, they are not responsible for their actions because the gods have already planned their life out for them. In Sophocles’ Oedipus Rex, King Oedipus is accused by the people of his city of some wrongdoings, the murder of his father and the incest with his mother. Sophocles uses the idea of fate to show Oedipus’ innocence and lack of control. This imagery shows that Oedipus was controlled by the gods and was unable to control his actions even

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