Antigone And Creon's Rebellion

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Rebellion stems from oppression, while the potency it has to change norms varies from context. Any rebellion is motivated by the need for change, from Martin Luther King’s Birmingham protests to Guy Fawkes’ Gunpowder Plot. Following a similar need for social change, Antigone’s rebellious message resonates 50 years later. Refusing to revise her principles, she accomplished little in her end goal but managed to alter society’s perception of the king and his laws. Her message gained a contagious element from her passion for a revolution, urging others to act as well. So while Polynices was never buried, Creon’s family and Antigone suicided, and Creon made no apparent change in character, other people were moved by Antigone’s fraternal love. Her …show more content…

Polynices was never buried, and so her rebellion can be considered a personal failure. Still, rebellion unveiled the intricacies of characters through their motivations and innermost beliefs. Antigone was motivated by her youthful angst and naivety, while Creon drove himself to fight her upsetting his kingdom. Creon’s priorities and Antigone’s perfectionism were revealed, both of which shape the way they react to one another. Antigone symbolizes the youthful mission for perfection and the innocent refusal to compromise her beliefs in search of happiness. Creon is revealed to be a leader who places peace over everything else, who believes life follows a systematic string of moments that make happiness. Ismene and Haemon represent the public, swayed by Antigone’s defiance and rebellion, which translated to the audience at the time of performance.For the audience, rebellion diffused a message of social change, essentially making Antigone’s principles a torch that must be carried on by the audience living under a Nazi-occupied France. Rebellion did not accomplish the initial result, but managed to create a social epidemic and reveal intimate character

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