Wednesday, November 13, 2019
A Humorous Distillation of Antigone by Maurice Sagoff :: essays research papers
A Humorous Distillation of Antigone by Maurice Sagoff       This poem is    quite successful in getting the plot across to the reader.    Unfortunatly, that is all he can get across because of his    beleif that, "inside every fat book is a skinny book trying to    get out." Sargoff cannot have character descriptions, themes,    or any real detail in his "skinny book" because of his beleifs.    Sargoff leaves off why Polynices should not be burried and    why his brother, who is not even menchoned, can be    burried. This is important to building the feelings of contempt    towards Creon and an understanding of what Antigone is    doing. Also, because this is a "Humorous Distillation," the    tone of the play is lost. Instead of being a dramatic play    about obeying a higher law, it is a comical, rhyming poem    about what happened. This may cause it to lose the impact it    had. Sargoff reduces important and pivotal points in the    story to a sentence such as, "Creon wilts, and tries to bang a    U-ee." This sentence does not tell of Creon's attempt to    repent for what he! has done by burrying Polynices and then    going to free Antigone. Even if Sargoff gets all of the plot    across, that is not enough to tell the whole story. Aristotelian    Unities Yes, Antigone does follow the Aristotelian Unities.    The play occurs in the same place and roughly the same    time. Things that happened before the play or outside of the    place, was told by a messenger or a character themself. The    action was all centered around Antigone's actions. Her    actions were the sole cause of everything that happened.    Greek Tragedy Antigone does follow the Greek definition of    tragedy. Tragedy is a story or play that has a signifigant    conflict of morals, with a noble protagonist displaying a    tragic flaw that is their strength but leads to their downfall.    The exposition of the story is when Antigone is talking with    her sister and we learn of what has happened. The turning    point of this play is when Creon tries to mend his wrongs by    burying Polynices and freeing Antigone. Antigone herself is    the tragic hero because she dies for what she believes    morally right. Antigone's tragic flaw is that she has only sees    her point of view which leads to her death. The denouement    of this story is everybody dying and then Creon realizing    what he has caused. The song of the story is attenden to    throuhg the chorus' comentating on what is happening or    					    
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