Tragic Flaw Essay

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    Othello As A Tragic Hero

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    Shakespeare’s Othello has been seen not as an ordinary victim or villain, but is a combination of both presented as a tragic hero. A tragic hero is a great or virtuous character in a dramatic tragedy who is destined for downfall, suffering, or defeat. (tragic-hero) throughout the play Othello is characterized as a strong-willed man who often trusts the wrong people which in turn leads to his demise. Othello begins the play as a good man with good values, who is a trusted solider and a loving,…

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    Faustus Tragedy is a play that shows the downfall of a human with an unhappy ending. Tragedy usually happens to an average man who makes poor decisions in life and ends in pain. In the play of Doctor Faustus by Christopher Marlowe, Faustus’ life is tragic because he is a respected scholar, but he chooses to spend eternity in hell. Marlowe portrays the life of a successful Christian scholar, Doctor Faustus, who manages to receive his doctorate in theology and divinity, but he chooses to spend his…

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    The archetype used in Macbeth is the tragic hero. “Tragic hero is a literary character who makes a judgement error that inevitably leads to his/her downfall”(1). Macbeth contains a tragic flaw that occurs throughout the play. In the play he lets his emotions take over his body instead of his mind. As Macbeth gains a higher rank in society, he will have more to lose along the way. The play Macbeth, by William Shakespeare takes place in 11th century Scotland. Macbeth is filled with hope, ambition…

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    A tragic hero is defined as a literary character who makes an error of judgment or has a fatal flaw that, combined with fate and external forces, brings on a tragedy. In Yukio Mishima’s The Sailor who Fell from Grace with the Sea, the main protagonist, Ryuji Tsukazaki, proves to be a tragic hero as his internal confliction and the ambiguity of his character served as his fatal flaw which ultimately led him to his death. Ryuji believes that he is destined for glory, even though he does not know…

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    perspectives that force the reader to contemplate about whom the intended hero of the story is. However, throughout much of the play, one of the most dynamic characters, John Proctor, heavily displays the true demeanor of a hero. Despite his fatal flaw, Proctor obtains noble characteristics and righteous qualities that cannot be dismissed, which are evident in his final decision regarding the hangings. John’s decision leaves an everlasting impression in Salem, being that he hangs on the theory…

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    John Proctor is the tragic hero in The Crucible by Arthur Miller. The downfall of John in the play is due to a human flaw, which largely qualifies him as a tragic hero. John is a respectable farmer, who has a high social status .The tragic flaw was the physical attraction he had towards Abigail Williams, yet he had a wife. His wife realizes his husband’s acts of adultery and gets jealous. Proctor knows that he has the option to confess the deed. However, his pride comes in his way and he is…

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    If prophecies were to be real, a person would expect what will happen in the future. This is a world true idea; at least in “Oedipus the King,” a story by Sophocles about the tragic fate of Oedipus the protagonist, that reaches his own doom unwillingly. His destiny stabs him in the back at the end of the story, resulting in him suffering in the dark leaving him with his problems. Destiny is defined as an event that will eventually happen to a specific person in the future. Oedipus’s destiny…

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    Psychotherapist and essayist Adam Phillips once said, “Tragic heroes are failed protagonists. Their ends are unrealistic and their means are impractical.” Even though Phillips was only an infant during the “Red Scare,” when anyone could have been targeted and categorized as a communist, he grew up to define the term tragic hero which was used in Arthur Miller’s allegory to the “Red Scare.” Arthur Miller’s The Crucible takes place during the Salem Witch Trials in 1692, when hysteria spreads among…

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    Antigone by Sophocles there are two stand out characters that change throughout the entire play. In Julius Cesar the audience meets the noble Brutus. In Antigone, the head strong King Creon is introduced. In both of the plays, the two characters are tragic heroes. Their hamartias lead to both of their downfalls and juristically change them and the plot. But, in the end Brutus seems to have come full circle with himself and develop the most between the two of them. Brutus’ character changes from…

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    Is Gloucester’s Demise the Result of Him Being His Own Enemy? The Earl of Gloucester on the play King Lear by William Shakespeare is a nobleman in King Lear’s court, the father of two sons who do not belong to the same mother and a character whose fate matches Lear’s as latter’s daughters Goneril and Reagan resemble Gloucester’s son Edmund. Gloucester plays a critical role in the play as he demonstrates the hardships of living during the 17th century and under the Elizabethan chain of…

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