Table of Contents
- 1 How do Antigone and Creon view justice differently?
- 2 What errors in Judgement does Creon make in Antigone?
- 3 What characteristics does Creon have in Antigone?
- 4 Why did Creon not want to bury Polyneices?
- 5 Which event resolves the conflict between Antigone and Creon?
- 6 What is the conflict between haemon and Creon?
- 7 What happens when Creon sentences Antigone to death?
- 8 Who are the main characters in Antigone by Sophocles?
- 9 Who is the Good Girl in the play Antigone?
How do Antigone and Creon view justice differently?
Creon is certain that his ability to be king will justify leaving Polynices unburied. On the other hand Antigone sees justice as the ability to bury her brother. Conflict explodes with their inability to compromise over what is the definition of justice.
What errors in Judgement does Creon make in Antigone?
Finally, he has anagnorisis that made him realize the error of his judgment which reversed the turn of events resulting in tragedy. Creon is a good leader who only wants law and order in his kingdom. However, Creon’s tragic flaw is his excessive pride, hubris.
How the conflict between Antigone and Creon conveys a theme related to justice?
The main source of conflict between Antigone and Creon is the issue of the burial of Antigone’s dead brother. Both of her brothers were killed in battle, however one brother fought against their home city and was considered a traitor. Creon issued a law that whoever tries to bury this man will be put to death.
What characteristics does Creon have in Antigone?
Creon is powerfully built, but a weary and wrinkled man suffering the burdens of rule. A practical man, he firmly distances himself from the tragic aspirations of Oedipus and his line. As he tells Antigone, his only interest is in political and social order.
Why did Creon not want to bury Polyneices?
Creon exiled Oedipus from Thebes after Oedipus killed his father and married his mother. Creon also declared that Polyneices would not receive a proper burial because he committed treason against his own city.
Does Creon admit he was wrong?
When Creon loses his wife and son, Creon’s pride disappears, and he admits that he made a terrible mistake by not listening to anyone’s advice.
Which event resolves the conflict between Antigone and Creon?
The conflict between familial loyalty and civil obedience is resolved when each of the characters ultimately chooses family over obedience to Creon. Haemon chooses Antigone when he tries to stab his father and then take his own life. Eurydice chooses her son over Creon when she takes her own life.
What is the conflict between haemon and Creon?
Creon only hears a young child who he believes is foolishly in love with a girl, while Haemon is actually making valid arguments for his family, his culture and the future of Thebes. Creon threatens to kill Antigone in front of his son. Haemon threatens him back by stating Creon will never see him again and leaves.
What is Creon afraid of?
Creon’s greatest fear is: War. Angering the gods. Losing his family.
What happens when Creon sentences Antigone to death?
When Creon sentences Antigone to death, Ismene first tries… read analysis of Ismene Brother-in-law of Oedipus, Creon becomes king of Thebes when Oedipus’s two sons die while battling each other for control of the city.
Who are the main characters in Antigone by Sophocles?
Character List. Ismene – Blonde, full-figured, and radiantly beautiful, the laughing, talkative Ismene is the good girl of the family. She is reasonable and understands her place, bowing to Creon’s edict and attempting to dissuade Antigone from her act of rebellion. As in Sophocles’ play, she is Antigone’s foil.
Why is Haemon rejected twice by Antigone?
Haemon appears twice in the play. In the first, he is rejected by Antigone; in the second, he begs his father for Antigone’s life. Creon’s refusal ruins his exalted view of his father. He too refuses the happiness that Creon offers him and follows Antigone to a tragic demise.
Who is the Good Girl in the play Antigone?
Ismene – Blonde, full-figured, and radiantly beautiful, the laughing, talkative Ismene is the good girl of the family. She is reasonable and understands her place, bowing to Creon’s edict and attempting to dissuade Antigone from her act of rebellion. As in Sophocles’ play, she is Antigone’s foil.