22 Results for crime and punishment

Discuss why Oedipus is a tragedy (i.e. its elements) Themes in the novel include „X Blindness versus sight, „X Knowledge through suffering „X Man does not control his own destiny/fateOedipus as a tragic hero. „X Pride arrogance (characteristics) Oedipus is seen a...
'In The Antigone, Antigone gets what she wants, Creon gets what she deserves.' How far do you agree with this view? To suggest that in Sophocles' Antigone, Antigone gets what she wants and Creon gets what he deserves is clearly a contentious statement. On a simplistic level this...
In both Sophocles' Oedipus the King and Homer's The Odyssey, the main characters transgress beyond accepted social norms and commit crimes. Odysseus blinds a man, acts recklessly in providing for the safety of his crew, and is unfaithful (repeatedly) to his wife. Oedipus is unkind to a b...
Oedipus is a prime example of a tragidy, according to Aristotle's definition in the "poetics". Aristotle's Poetics is considered the first work of literary criticism in our tradition. The couple of pages in the book mainly describe tragedy from Aristotle's point of view....
Looking at Death through Antigone's Eyes- Obey the Gods or the King In Sophocles' play, Antigone, the main character Antigone is faced with a horrible tragedy; her two brothers have just died fighting each other and now one of her brothers, Polyneices, is not given proper burial right...
To fully explain the conditions governing Classical Greek Theatre it is first necessary to go back in history to understand its origins. Greek Theatre began over 2,500 years ago – 2,000 years before Shakespeare – in its earliest form it took the form of religious rites, involving songs and danc...
1. In which section of the play do we see Oedipus act like the man who killed a number of people for not getting out of the crossroads? Oedipus, by nature carries the characteristics and traits of his father; therefore, he is hot-tempered and often irrational. One part where we see such traits is w...
The reputations that people carry have a lot to do with their code of honour. Showing honour makes a person respected and strong and dishonour brings shame and misfortune. In the Greek tragedy Antigone written by Sophocles and the Shakespearean tragedy Othello written by William Shakespeare, honou...
Sophocles uses a mixture of both visual and emotional imagery to create the morally questioning, Greek tragedy \'Oedipus Tyrannus\'. He presents the audience with an intense drama, which addresses the reality and importance of the gods that the Greeks fervently believed in. The play also forces th...
Because Oedipus knows nothing about the past of Thebes, he is not an assassin. Oedipus committed murder but unknowingly of who King Laius was. Oedipus' honor was his claim against the murder. Had it been the other way around and Oedipus had lost the battle, King Laius' alibi would ha...
?Different rulers have different views regarding law and justice. Some rulers create laws for their own benefits whereas others create laws for the benefit of the city. In this essay, I will describe both those kind of rulers. One is Creon in Antigone, who puts the love for his city and its law abov...
Oedipus is born to King Laius and Queen Jocasta of Thebes. A few days after his birth, his parents took him to the Oracle as they did in those times and the Oracle prophesied that the boy would grow up and kill his father and marry his mother. Shocked by this news, they had a servant take the baby t...
In Sophocles’ Greek tragedy, Antigone, two characters undergo character changes. During the play the audience sees these two characters’ attitudes change from close minded to open-minded. It is their close minded, stubborn attitudes, which lead to their decline in the play, and ultimate...
It has often been said that time heals all wounds. Although I believe this statement to be true, I find it incomplete. Time may heal, but it never forgets. This fact is apparent in our literature, both classical and modern. It is an oddity of the human condition: we are fascinated by evil and wrongd...
"Power corrupts, and absolute power corrupts absolutely," said Lord Acton generations ago. In the Greek tragedy Antigone, written by Sophocles, there was a character named Kreon, the antagonist, who was the king of Thebes. Thebes was an autocratic state where Kreon had absolute powe...
It is true that all human beings are guided, controlled, or motivated by allegiances to some extent, whether it be to God, to the state, and/or to familial love. The play Antigone by Sophacles has many references to this fact. Antigone, the main character in the play, does not survive physically as...
As the course Athens to New York begins, four questions are drilled into our heads as the foundations of the course. These questions might as well be Greek to us, for many college freshmen have never been asked these questions before, not to mention required to take a course that is focused mainly...
William Shakespeare and Sophocles are playwrights that illustrate their keen understanding of human behavior. In the plays Oedipus the King and Othello, we observe man's inability to reliably distinguish between what seems to be and what actually is. Additionally, we are shown how different ...
In the play Antigone, by Sophocles, the protagonist, Antigone, defies all of the beliefs held by the society she lives in, and breaks the king's law on account of her own morals. Originally, one of Antigone's two brothers was supposed to take control of the throne, however, in a duel over...
The Tragic Hero in the Play AntigoneAntigone, which was written by Sophocles, is possibly the first written play that still exists today (www.imagi... 1). There is much controversy between who the 'tragic hero' is in the play. Some people say Antigone, some say Creon, others even say Heamon. I b...
ROLE OF THE CHORUSIn both of the plays Electra and Medea the chorus has a large part in terms of interaction in the play itself. The chorus offers advice to the characters of the play throughout their many times of turmoil. The chorus becomes the opposing view of Anaxagoras' theme of "Nous". The cho...
Authorial InformationEuripides was born in 484 BC and took up drama at the young age of 25. At most drama competitions, however his plays came in last place until he was about 45 or 50 years old. In his entire life, he wrote 92 plays of which only five received first place awards at competition. Eur...