Foreshadowing is a representation before hand, some kind of premonition of what happens in the story. In the play 'Antigone', the main character of the same name decides to disobey an inhumane, unfair, unjust, unpopular law. The foreshadowing of what happens to her in her disobedience is her statement to her sister, Ismene, 'I shall not suffer aught so dreadful as an ignoble death'. Antigone indeed hangs herself after being walled up in a remote cave, away from Haemon, her fiance and first cousin. The foreshadowing of what happens in response to the law is the blind prophet Teiresias' statement to Theban King Creon, 'A time not long to be delayed shall awaken the wailing of men and women in thy house'. King Creon indeed suffers the loss of Eurydice, his wife and his Queen; and of his son, Haemon. Both commit suicide.
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To give a hint of future happenings is the way in which foreshadowing is used in "Antigone" by Sophocles (495 B.C.E. - 405 B.C.E.).Specifically, foreshadowing is a literary technique by which the author hints at what may happen to a main character. For example, in the beginning of the play, Theban Princess Antigone foreshadows her own fate. She declares that the worst that will happen to her for breaking the law is an ignoble death. Death by live burial becomes her punishment, but hanging by her own hands becomes her actual fate.
That Antigone's death will bring about another'sdeath and that father and son never will see each other again are the threats made by Haemon in "Antigone" by Sophocles (495 B.C.E. - 405 B.C.E.).Specifically, Theban King Creon says that Princess Antigone will be executed. Prince Haemon, Antigone's betrothed, makes an effort to get Creon to change his mind. Creon does not understand that Haemon is foreshadowing his own death in saying that someone will die as a result of Antigone's death and that he never plans to be in his father's company ever again.
An observation on the inevitability of fate is the purpose of the choral ode that follows Antigone's final exit in "Antigone" by Sophocles (495 B.C.E. - 405 B.C.E.).Specifically, the chorus gives examples of three mortals who suffer. One example recounts persecution that is followed by triumph and vengeance. The other two examples relate to less fortunate meetings with Dionysos the wine god and with fate. The ode therefore summarizes that Antigone's suffering fits in with the fate of a god-cursed line.
king Creon is her nemesi because he made the law polyneices was not alowd to be buried.Type your answer here...