Antigone: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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* [[My God, What Have I Done?]]: Creon at the end.
* [[My God, What Have I Done?]]: Creon at the end.
* [[Name's the Same]]: No, Creon's wife is not the same Eurydice whom Orpheus loved and tried to rescue from the Underworld.
* [[Name's the Same]]: No, Creon's wife is not the same Eurydice whom Orpheus loved and tried to rescue from the Underworld.
** Nor is Creon the same man as the guy from [[Euripides]]' ''[[Medea]]''—that guy was the king of Corinth, not Thebes.
** Nor is Creon the same man as the guy from [[Euripides]]' ''[[Medea]]''--that guy was the king of Corinth, not Thebes.
* [[Not Blood Siblings]]: Antigone is not only Haemon's cousin, but also his foster sister, since Creon raised Antigone, Ismene, Polynices, and Eteocles as his children after Oedipus left Thebes.
* [[Not Blood Siblings]]: Antigone is not only Haemon's cousin, but also his foster sister, since Creon raised Antigone, Ismene, Polynices, and Eteocles as his children after Oedipus left Thebes.
* [[Prophecies Are Always Right]]: We don't know how the neighbouring cities feel about Thebes by the end of the play, but just about everything else happened as predicted.
* [[Prophecies Are Always Right]]: We don't know how the neighbouring cities feel about Thebes by the end of the play, but just about everything else happened as predicted.

Latest revision as of 14:48, 13 July 2021

The last[1] of the Theban trilogy of plays by Sophocles (preceded by Oedipus the King and Oedipus at Colonus), Antigone follows the fate of the daughter of Oedipus.

The conflict between Polynices and Eteocles was chronicled in the play The Progeny; sadly, only a single exchange survives of that play. It can be read here.

Tropes used in Antigone include:
  1. story-wise; it was the first one written