How Does Antigone Change Creon

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“Look—what’s Creon doing with our two brothers? He’s honouring one with a full funeral and treating the other one disgracefully!” (Line 30) Creon and Antigone had a lot of conflicts throughout the story. Antigone had a different mindset from Creon, which created a conflict through their words, actions, and ideas. Creon is a tragic hero because he makes judgment calls that harm him in the future, he thinks they are good at the time, but they end up causing his own destruction. Other people's words influence him, such as Antigone's, to change throughout the story. The fact that Creon changes throughout the story advances the plot and makes the reader want to keep reading.

Creon gets easily triggered by things that people say. He will wish death upon anything or anyone if something comes across the wrong way. Creon didn't like the Antigone wanted to bury his brother. But Antigone made it clear that that does not matter when she said “Yes. I’ll do my duty to my brother— and yours as well, if you’re not prepared to. I won’t be caught betraying him” in line 55. This evidence supports the fact the Antigone would do everything in her power to stay true to her family and friends, since Creon would not. …show more content…

Do you deny you did this or admit it?” (line 495) to Antigone. While Antigone responds with, “I admit I did it. I won’t deny that” (line 500). Creon is punishing Antigone and wanting to make her feel guilty for wanting to honor her family. But she makes this clear that this is not how it works when she says, “Take me and kill me—what more do you want?” (line 565). The only thing she wants is her brother to be happy in his afterlife, but Creon doesn't care about that because she broke a

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