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Antigone, The Tragic Hero

Decent Essays

Antigone is the tragic hero because she had goodness in her heart, nobility as a princess, a fatal flaw in her personality, and a status downfall when she was put inside the cave. All of these descriptions fit Aristotle’s description of what a tragic hero is. Aristotle was a philosopher. He was passionate about his own definition and characteristics of how a story's tragic hero should be portrayed. In the time he was alive, men were shown to be the superior other. Women stayed inside while they watched the children and cooked a nice meal for their family. Men worked to earn money for their family. So, it’s safe to say that men had more recognition. More ‘fame’. Although most people believed that, in this arbitrary time, there were others who disagreed with these unfair decisions.
In 367 BC, Aristotle attended Plato’s Academy. Plato was his professor in his twenty years of attending that school. According to Classics Network, Plato was known as one of the many people who opposed excluding women from society. Because of his strong beliefs, he influenced many of his …show more content…

Most of them you’d have to dig quite deep for, but once found they are quite interesting. Sophocles was born in 498 B.C. and wrote ‘Antigone’ in 441 B.C.. Plato and Aristotle were born after ‘Antigone’ was written. During this time, people thought men were superior. They were the stars. Sophocles could have disagreed just like Plato had, so when he wrote ‘Antigone’ he chose to add in both a male and a female tragic hero. Because of the pressure from others, he chose to write the character of Antigone in a secretive kind of way. While her character does show traits of a tragic hero, it’s not as easy to figure out with only a simple read. Most likely, because of the years Aristotle and Plato were born, their views on women’s role in society were greatly influenced by the ‘secret’ example of Antigone as a tragic

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