Preview

Creon as a Tyrant in Antigone, by Sophocles

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
590 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Creon as a Tyrant in Antigone, by Sophocles
Michael Baker
Professor Bryan
English 2100
29 July 2013
Creon as a Tyrant in Antigone, by Sophocles Corruption because of power has been a constant theme of mankind since the dawn of humanity. “Antigone”, by Sophocles, is an excellent example of an author’s attempt to portray this theme in a play. This theme is evident throughout the poem, but is especially clear in the dialogue between Creon and the Sentry, and eventually Antigone, beginning on line 248 and ending on line 594. Tyranny is defined by Merriam Webster’s online dictionary as “oppressive power exerted by government (Merriam-Webster). This scene begins with the Sentry entering from the side and slowly describing to Creon that his decree forbidding the burial of Polynices has been broken. The Sentry seems to be afraid of Creon, wondering aloud that “if somebody get the news to Creon first, what’s to save your neck?” (Antigone lines 256-257) This mood of fear continues throughout this scene, with the Sentry dragging out into many lines what might have only taken a few lines to tell. He obviously appears to be afraid of Creon, and rightfully so. Creon threatens him with violence and death, saying “simple death won’t be enough for you, not till we string you up alive and wring the immortality out of you.” (Antigone lines 348-350) Creon has been in power for a very short period of time and seems to be paranoid that his power is being undermined by this violation of his decree. He doesn’t appear to be concerned that his decree goes directly against the law of the Gods. Tyranny is sometimes born out of insecurities. Once it is discovered that Antigone is the culprit in the crime, she and Creon begin to have a discussion on the morality of his decree and her guilt in this crime. She freely admits that she has committed the crime, but believes that she is justified in her actions, even going so far as to call Creon a “lucky tyrant.” (Antigone line 566) It is possible that Creon deluded himself so far



Cited: Sophocles. Antigone. Trans. R.S. Gwynn. Literature A Pocket Anthology. 5th. ed. Eds. R.S. Gwynn. Longman: Penguin Academics, 2012. 838-847. Print. "Tyranny About Our Definitions: All Forms of a Word (noun, Verb, Etc.) Are Now Displayed on One Page." Merriam-Webster. Merriam-Webster, n.d. Web. 29 July 2013.

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    We see evidence from the text when it says “since I clearly caught her disobeying the only culprit in the entire city,I won’t perjure myself before the state.No I’ll kill her (lines 744-747). This evidence supports my claim because it tells you what they are really arguing about and what the major conflict is over which is Antigone.The evidence tells you that Creon thinks nothing is wrong with his law but on the other hand his son does not think that it is fair because all she was trying to do was bury her dead…

    • 549 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Although Creon created the edict with good intentions for the people of Thebes, his failure to recognize the familial bond that ties Antigone to her brother Polyneices coupled with his newfound power as ruler of Thebes contributes to his tyrannical and delusional behavior which ultimately leads to his downfall. Looking back at “Oedipus The King”, Creon established himself as a rational individual, especially during his confrontation with Oedipus when clearing his name as culprit in a placid manner. However, Creon’s attitude shifts dramatically in “Antigone” after assuming the throne. Analysing Creon’s argument with oracle Tiresias reveals Creon’s transformation into a delusional tyrant. Tiresias offers his wisdom to Creon claiming he is responsible…

    • 257 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Throughout the play Antigone, Creon is portrayed as the king of discipline and pride. Creon’s pride is what makes him the tragic figure of Antigone. Though Antigone takes her life as the result of her sentence from Creon, it is not her pride that defines her fate but her unwillingness to accept her fate.…

    • 582 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Creon, the king of Thebes, is an extremely powerful ruler, so much so that many people fear him. In fact, he is so feared, he could even be called a tyrant. The sentry that reports Antigone’s “crime” is nearly shaking in his boots when he tells Creon. In lines 85-87 he says “And all the time a voice kept saying “You fool, don't you know you're walking straight into trouble?””, this shows that he is scared for his life and all he did was send a message. Another…

    • 269 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Creon's Laws In Antigone

    • 326 Words
    • 2 Pages

    “I admit I did it. I won’t deny that.”(Line 500) Antigone’s views are a direct polar opposite of Creon. The motivations of Antigone conflict with Creon highlight his characteristics of self pride, views of laws, and rudeness towards women. Each of these characteristics brings Creon out as a tragic hero as soon as the play begins and his role is ginormous throughout the play Antigone.…

    • 326 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In Sophocles play “Antigone”, Creon the king demanded that his people obey his rules and order even if it’s wrong. He believed this because it stops chaos and keeps order, but when he puts out the law that whoever were to bury Polyneices body will be put to death and this upsets all of the citizens, including his son. A true ruler must give his people what they want unlike Creon did, Creon’s people and his son told him he was making the wrong decision. When the towns people act like the counsel listen to them. The play disagrees with Creon because while he was a feared and mighty ruler in his own eyes, his own people were scared and untrusting of his rules and decisions.…

    • 965 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In the "Antigone," Creon has both flaws. He has the character flaw of willful arrogance and his unyielding behavior and he is flawed in his judgment (when he issues the proclamation). He realizes his character flaw when he states, "Oh it is hard to give in! But it is worse to risk everything for stubborn pride." (93-94) This is the point in the play where Creon realizes his mistake and begins to change as Teiresias has told him to. This is important because he mentions the difficulty he has going against his stubborn pride. The error of judgment is when he passes the proclamation without proper justification. His personal vengeance gets involved with his business affairs which cause him to make this fatal error. After Haemon states, "The wisest man will let himself be swayed by others' wisdom and relaxes in time," (234-235) Creon begins to feel guilt because he passed the proclamation blindly, without paying attention to the views of others. He passed the proclamation solely on his…

    • 549 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Antigone vs. Pai

    • 904 Words
    • 4 Pages

    There are many examples of past ideas and controversies that have arose once again in modern day situations. Although a lot of controversies get resolved, many do not and end up arising again. A great example of this comes from the play Antigone by Sophocles and the film Whale Rider by Niki Caro. In both the film and the play, a woman of royal decent is going against a leader for what she feels is right. Although Antigone dies in the end of Antigone, Pai from Whale Rider convinces the leader and lives a happy life. Pai and Antigone were very similar characters because of the problems they faced. First, Pai and Antigone were both women who stood up to a male-led society. Second, they were both listened to by the gods while the leader was not. Finally, they were both willing to die for what they felt was right.…

    • 904 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Next, Antigone says to Creon, “All those here would confirm this please them if their lips weren’t sealed by fear - being king, which offers all sorts of various benefits, means you can talk and act just as you wish.” and Creon responds with “In all of Thebes, you’re the only one who looks at things that way.” (572-577). This quote shows how arrogant Creon is and how he doesn’t realize what she is saying true but no one would say anything because they are scared of him. This shows how people fear Creon because of the power he has and that he could and would do anything to them if they were to speak up. Also, Creon and his son Haemon start arguing. “You’re the worst there is - you set your judgement up against your father.” “No, not when I see you making a mistake and being unjust.” (845-848). This quote is showing how Creon’s son Haemon sees that what he is doing isn’t right and that his power is driving him to do dumb things. It also shows that the power Creon has from being king is going to his head and He is doing things he shouldn't be doing. As you can see this shows how Creon is being is driven by…

    • 830 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In his famed work Antigone, Sophocles does what most authors fail to do. Unlike the general crowd, Sophocles uses positive personality traits to bring conflict to his characters. He breaks normal organization of works and pushes the use of character flaws out of view. With this, persuading irony is formed—an irony which immortalizes the play just as a proper burial would immortalize Polyneices. Standard positive traits result in Creon and Antigone’s disgraces.…

    • 664 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In the ancient Greek tragedy, Antigone, Sophocles’ character, King Creon will issue a law that no one will perform the burial rites over a dead traitor of the state. In advocating his law, he will deem Polynices a traitor. Antigone will unapologetically revolt against Creon’s law citing the rite's for the dead are the concern of the gods. Creon, believing himself to be omniscient in all matters of state and church ignores the coherent warnings given to him by his family and friend. Ironically, when he judges Antigone as a traitor to the state, Creon has committed the most grievous offense himself: treason against the laws of the gods,…

    • 636 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Antigone Vs Creon Essay

    • 514 Words
    • 3 Pages

    Creon becomes more agitated when Antigone seemingly mocks him when captured for her crime. “She laughs at what she’s done . Well, in this case, if she gets her way and goes unpunished, then she’s the man here, not me.” (lines 548-550) Creon’s sexism and overwhelming need for subordination allows him to see no other way for Antigone, except for her punishment, death.…

    • 514 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Defeat, something that you experience when you lose something, whether it is that you lose someone dear to you, lose in a contest or a game, or lose a battle that was hard fought for, but there are different ways to look at it. To embrace defeat is to realize that your actions were immoral or inadequate, and allow yourself to grow stronger and wiser from this situation, and to accept defeat is to not learn from your mistakes and to blame someone else for what happened. This is the basis of the concept of a tragic hero, introduced by the Greek philosopher, Aristotle. In Antigone by the Greek playwright Sophocles, it is established that Creon is not a tragic hero of the play. Creon was shown to blame others for the outcome of his own mistakes,…

    • 1093 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Creon of Antigone

    • 404 Words
    • 2 Pages

    Another quality of Creon that makes him a tragic hero is that he had bad judgment. Creon refused to have Polyneices buried because he felt that Polyneices was going to sell his people into slavery. Creon also punished Antigone for her “holy crime,” which was when she went against Creon’s edict for a virtuous reason. Because of Antigone’s crime, another one of Creon’s transgressions was accusing her sister, Ismene, equally for the crime and deciding to punish her too, by putting both Antigone and Ismene to death. Because he stood by his rule, Creon had some wrongdoings.…

    • 404 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Antigone does not consider herself to be guilty. Antigone attempted to justify herself to Creon saying that, “There is no guilt in reverence for the dead” (II, 121). Haimon brought to the attention of Creon the whispers of the city, and even “they say no woman has ever, so unreasonably, died so shameful a death for a generous act” (III, 66). Antigone’s reminded Creon of the gods, and how his judgment and law is miniscule in contrast to that of the gods: “it was not god’s proclamation. That final justice that rules the world below makes no such laws” (II, 66). Nevertheless, Creon did not show mercy at this…

    • 626 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays