Character Analysis Of Creon In Sophocles 'Antigone'

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In Antigone by Sophocles, Creon, the king of Thebes, most embodies the traits of an Aristotelian tragic hero because of his tragic flaws, his extreme punishment, and his recognition of his own errors. Creon's hamartia is hubris, which leads to his failure to heed the warnings of others in time to save Antigone and his family. In Scene 5, when Teiresias warns Creon of his pride and pleads for him to yield for his own good, Creon responds angrily, "If your birds-if the great eagles of God himself / Should carry him stinking bit by bit to heaven, I would not yield" (45-47). Even when cautioned against hubris by the prophet, Creon still fails to realize his mistakes and continues to let his pride blind him. This flaw is characteristic of a tragic

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