Edmond Dantès, the protagonist, is the epiphany of innocence during a time of immense turmoil. His journey from a freeman and soon-to-be husband into a prison of the state then into one of the most powerful men in Paris. This shows the jealousy and cruelty of humans while also establishing the gay youth of Edmond. He is betrayed by those whom he was meant to trust the most and painted into a Bonapartist. Still though, he dreams of the days he wishes to spend with his love. He still has hopes…
as Jake Gray and My Bloody Valentine 3D as Tom Hanniger. Jensen has the range and nuance to play a puzzling, many-sided character with seeming ease, giving us an opportunity to share in Dean’s agony, rage and happiness. Dean Winchester is a flawed hero and that’s what makes him ideal. He can be overbearing, bossy, stubborn and close-minded, but he can also be brave, intensely protective, unconditionally compassionate, and extremely loyal. Dean Winchester can be amazingly altruistic and…
As defined by Aristotle, hamartia is the tragic flaw that leads to a character’s downfall. Oedipus, the tragic hero of Sophocles’ Oedipus Rex, is a man whose hamartia is that he is not self-aware; he believes that he is the birth son of Polybus and Merope. Then, as the king of Thebes, he wants to bring King Laius’ murderer to justice without realizing he is searching for himself. Lastly, after answering the Sphinx's riddle and saving the citizens of Thebes, he marries the Theban queen, Jocasta,…
Mind over Matter Only the most intelligent people understand to what extent people are able to control their lives with their minds. In Man’s Search for Meaning by Vik E. Frankl, Jews in concentration camps use their minds to escape from their daily tortures. Meursault did not use his mind to control himself and paid the price in The Stranger by Albert Camus. The Wachowski brothers directed “The Matrix”, in which Neo used his mind to escape from the Matrix, and the Oracle tricked his mind in…
Remembering Reality I remember the day clearer than an untouched puddle. It was nearing 10 o'clock at night, and we were standing directly in front of New York’s “Big Joe Brady’s” restaurant; our favorite restaurant. “Today’s the day,” I announced, “the West is waiting for me.” “Bob please, you have to rethink this. I mean, going out West and expecting to automatically get wealthy? You’d have to be insane to think that's ever going to work!” Jimmy pleaded. “Of course you don't believe me. I…
Aristotle considered a tragic hero as a good man of high status who displays a tragic flaw and experiences a dramatic reversal along with an intense moment of recognition. In the play The Tragedy of Othello: The Moor of Venice written by William Shakespeare the main character, Othello, is portrayed as a tragic hero. Throughout the play he displays each characteristic of Aristotle’s definition of a tragic hero. Othello was often considered as a good man of high status in the play. Many people…
Many Greek plays have a tragic hero, and Sophocles's Antigone is no exception. Aristotle believes a tragic hero is a man that is not too good but also not too bad, is lifelike, is appropriate, is consistent, and who “does not fall into misfortune through vice or depravity, but falls because of some mistake” (On Tragic Character, 1145). Creon, the new king of Thebes, is the tragic hero in Antigone because he fulfills the four main characteristics of a tragic character, and he makes a fatal…
Faust, hero of one of the most durable legends in Western folklore and literature, the story of a German fortuneteller who sells his soul to the devil in exchange for knowledge and power. Faust owes his posthumous fame to the anonymous author of the first Faustbuch (1587), a collection of tales about the ancient magi—who were wise men skilled in the occult sciences—that were retold in the Middle Ages about such other reputed wizards as Merlin, Albertus Magnus, and Roger Bacon. Faust owes his…
perspicuous - he knows that he only holds a certain amount of power, but his desire to have more causes him to put others down and make them feel inferior. Rulers with this kind of attitude only end up harming themselves, mistreating others, or coming to a tragic realization, such as the one that Creon faces when he recognizes that his decision to sentence Antigone to death only…
Research Paper- Tragic character flaws in Oedipus the King and Othello, the Moor of Venice Oedipus the King and Othello, the Moor of Venice are both plays that explore character flaws that every common person possesses. Both poems tell stories about noble men (Oedipus and Othello respectively) who end up succumbing to their tragic character flaws. A tragic character flaw is accurately described in the Journal article “The Tragic Flaw: is it a Tragic error?” when it says: “ Distinct from this,…