OLIVEIRA, J. W. B.; http://lattes.cnpq.br/7708411767005254; OLIVEIRA , Jorge Wesley Batista.
Resumo:
This work analyzes the characters Antigone and Ismene in Sophocles’ tragedy
Antigone, which constitutes our research’s corpus. Therefore, our main objective is to
understand the delimited roles of these two characters in the aforementioned work. To
reach this goal, we discuss about the social role attributed to Greek women
contemporary to Sophocles, with the purpose of establishing comparisons between
Sophocles’ female fictional characters, protagonists or otherwise, and the historical
women in Classical Greece. The relevance of our work is proved then by the
observation that, while in the limited democracy of the polis the woman is not a citizen
nor a protagonist, in Sophocles’ tragedy, despite not being socially equal to a man, is
elevated to the protagonist’s condition, becoming a tragic heroine. The methodology
of this research is of a basic, bibliographical and qualitative nature, and therefore
involves consultation of critical and theoretical works and aims the analyses and
interpretation of the aforementioned character’s actions and personality. To this end,
we used Giordani (1992), Pomeroy (1995) and Martin (1998) as our main sources of
historical studies, besides Aristotle (1997), Lesky (1976), Jaeger (2001), Romilly
(2008) and Castro (2011), as theoretical support to our tragedy studies, and to the
analyses of Sophocles’ work. Therefore, our research allowed us to understand the
roles of these two Sophoclean women: Antigone is a tragic heroine, whose great deeds
yield her bitter consequences; and Ismene, by refusing to act, represents that view of
the fragile woman, with no rights to citizenship, as per the political, social and
ideological codes of Classical Greece.