He is the opposition to Antigone’s revolutionary ways and the judge which indirectly ends with her death. Yes its true that Antigone is loyal to her brother but that doesn’t give her the right to break the rules of society. We have rules for a reason, to keep order and peace in a society. Rules may not be perfect but they do serve its purpose. A society without rules will just be chaotic and everyone will just do as they please with no fear of punishment or repercussions. Creon’s loyalty however is to his city first than his family. This quality is what any good captain, president, general, or king needs to have in order to bring stability, peace and order to society. He didn’t break the law, he was just trying make an example out of Polynices and at the same time deter anyone who had the same idea of going against the kingdom and society. Without Creon Antigone and people like her will just do as they please without any regards to the rules of society. It was just sad to see that he wasn’t able to change the rules and that his pride and ego prevented him to talk to Antigone not as a king but as an uncle. If he would’ve made a better attempt to come to a mutual understanding with her maybe the ending for everyone would’ve been different, but as any good Greek play that is hardly
He is the opposition to Antigone’s revolutionary ways and the judge which indirectly ends with her death. Yes its true that Antigone is loyal to her brother but that doesn’t give her the right to break the rules of society. We have rules for a reason, to keep order and peace in a society. Rules may not be perfect but they do serve its purpose. A society without rules will just be chaotic and everyone will just do as they please with no fear of punishment or repercussions. Creon’s loyalty however is to his city first than his family. This quality is what any good captain, president, general, or king needs to have in order to bring stability, peace and order to society. He didn’t break the law, he was just trying make an example out of Polynices and at the same time deter anyone who had the same idea of going against the kingdom and society. Without Creon Antigone and people like her will just do as they please without any regards to the rules of society. It was just sad to see that he wasn’t able to change the rules and that his pride and ego prevented him to talk to Antigone not as a king but as an uncle. If he would’ve made a better attempt to come to a mutual understanding with her maybe the ending for everyone would’ve been different, but as any good Greek play that is hardly