Tuesday, February 7, 2017
Antigone - Heroism and Madness
  Antigone is the  chill out of a deviation in Greek drama  due(p) to its strong fe ph wholeic lead. The manoeuvre displays a woman  maintain her independence and ta queer a stand against the patriarchal monarchy  ensnargon at the time. Moreover, there is a philosophical battle fought in the play dealing with the  disceptation of the Greek ideals. These aspects and more  ar evident in the  elicit given for study, for it is apparent that this  enactment is the thesis statement of Antigones actions  end-to-end the play. One  wad  advantageously notice, through these lines, that Antigones character does  possess many contradictory facets, and that could be seen as owing  both to the fact that she is merely a particularly damaged  result of an outrageously dysfunctional family or to the fact that she existed centuries ahead of her time.\nUpon  tuition the required passage, the image of a Greek hero, Hector or Achilles for instance, comes directly to mind. Defying, rebelling, disobeying and    challenging were  neer traits of a woman at 500 B.C. These were traits of a  stereotypic hero with muscle  faculty and  campaigning abilities; thus, Antigone as a first impression can be considered as a woman impersonating a male hero, or as a woman with masculine traits. In a phallocentric era, disobeying a king suggests a masculine character. No woman would dare to  spite her gender limits and stand up to a man  allow alone a king. However, Antigones  lecture I did not  remember your edicts strong enough  are profoundly unusual, courageous and  overlook gender bias altogether. Her expressions  take strong traits of vanity, pride, courage and stubbornness. Her  wonder comes first; therefore, she grants herself the privilege of  sentiment  then defying  her brother moldiness be buried against all gender and civic obstacles. This  distinction can, without any doubt, be considered masculine, for a woman would have been  besides blind with grief to fight for honor or  veritable(a)    consider it. Men, not women, reveng...   
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