How Stubbornness Leads to Disaster in Sophocles' Antigone

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Parents are there to protect and raise their children. It is their choice on how to do it. Many can be very nice and almost not strict enough, but others can seem stubborn and mean. Unlike strict parents, people who are truly stubborn can be much, much worse. Their inability to be wrong or not get what they want can destroy relationships and lives. This happened in Sophocles' Antigone, she was doing what she felt to be right and her uncle, Creon the king of Thebes, had her killed because he did not agree with her point of view. Stubbornness can lead to bad judgments and horrible repercussions. Stubbornness is like a parasite that takes over a persons mind and body, and makes them sad, depressed, and angry. In the play almost every character exhibits some level of stubbornness, and it leads to disaster.

Stubbornness is displayed many times in the play by Creon, the King of Thebes. He shows this stubbornness when he finds out that Antigone has turned against him and buried Polynieces, her brother. Even though she was family, his niece and the fiancé of his son, Haimon, he still ha...

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