Tragedy-Bound

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According to Aristotle, a tragic hero is a character, usually in a play, who evokes pity and terror within other characters and the audience; tends to have a higher “moral worth” than normal characters; suffers from hamartia, or tragic flaw; exhibits hubris, or excessive pride; and comes to a realization of their mistakes over the course of the play. In the Greek plays Oedipus Rex and Antigone, both by the famous ancient Greek playwright Sophocles, the characters Oedipus, Antigone, and Creon each face their own tragic experiences: Oedipus suffers the irony of the fulfillment of “the Child of Fortune” prophecy, despite his efforts to avoid it (Sophocles, 434-436); Antigone faces death as a result of her persistence in giving Polydices a proper burial (Sophocles, 317); Creon becomes engulfed in loneliness and regret as consequences for his decisions (Sophocles, 349-352). Of these three characters, however, Oedipus of Oedipus Rex appears to be the strongest candidate for a tragic hero, according to Aristotle’s definition, due to his prophesized misfortune; high moral worth as a result of his authoritative position; doubt in the abilities of the gods and overreliance on human judgment; stubbornly closed mind; and gradual realization of the truth.

Antigone, Creon, and Oedipus each evoke a feeling of pity and/or terror from the audience in their own ways. In Antigone, the chorus, which is shown to sympathize with Antigone throughout much of the play, draws out a sense of suspense and sorrow for Antigone’s capture (Sophocles, 307). Furthermore, Antigone laments her fate, extracting sympathy from the audience, by uttering the words, “They mock me. Gods of Thebes! why / scorn you me / Thus, to my face, / Alive, not death-stricken yet?” (...

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...aving actually gouged out his own eyes in order to truly find wisdom.

Each of these three tragic figures nearly all fulfill Aristotle’s definition of a “tragic hero.” They each evoke pity and/or terror within the audience or other characters in some form; they each are of higher moral worth than common people, due to their royal blood; they each suffer their own hamartia, including Antigone’s being a disregard for rules when applying her self-rigteousness, Creon’s impatience, and Oedipus’s quick temperament; they are all full of pride and stubborn in all they do; and each character, save for Antigone, experiences a realization of their mistakes in the end. Yet, out of all three characters, these aspects of a tragic hero are more dramatically presented with Oedipus’s character than with Antigone or Creon.

Works Cited

"Antigone" and "Oedipus Rex" by Sophocles

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