Post 11- Festival
Open Question In Antigone , Sophocles presents the narrative of Antigone, a noble born from incest in tumultuous times. While Antigone’s high birth gives her the option to live a life of prosperity, she instead opts to defy her (great) uncle to follow her religious duty by burying her brother. Through each character’s high status and the familial ties of all allies and enemies, Sophocles illustrates that both high birth and familiarity with the enemy can serve to amplify tragedy. Sophocles presents Antigone’s reaction to seeing Polyneices unburied as crazed and desperate. In contrast to her earlier attempt to bury Polyneices, Antigone cries out in anguish and is apprehended while performing rites of burial. Antigone’s emotional response to seeing Polyneices’s bare body shows her lack of control over emotional response and lack of care for the presence of guards. Through this, Sophocles demonstrates the importance of Antigone’s noble birth -- Antigone’s own noble birth led her to...