Thursday
I
recently read Sophocles’s Antigone[1]
in the Classical Readings course that I’m enrolled in as part of Rosemont
College’s MFA in Creative Writing Program. I found the text full of provocative,
morbid language, from phrases such as “breathless dead” (942) to “strange new
tomb” (939), used to set the tone and mood of the play, but what really caught
my attention was how her brother’s burial became the protagonist Antigone’s
defining action. In this essay, I’ll discuss how her defining action
corresponds with symbolic entombment imagery used in the play to associate Antigone
with death and her fate. I’ll also discuss how contemporary fiction writers can
use a similar technique today.
Antigone performs the defining
action when she buries her brother Polynices.
Believing that the gods will her to do so, she confidently breaks her uncle King
Creon’s law that states anyone caught burying the body will be stoned to death.
Antigone buries her brother alone, but Creon’s minions discover her. Creon
gives Antigone the chance to say she’s ignorant of the law, but she doesn’t do so,
insulting and defying him, and he ultimately punishes her by entombing her
alive. In the tomb, she hangs herself with a noose, setting other tragic deaths
in motion. Haemon, Creon’s son and Antigone’s fiancé, kills himself after he
finds Antigone’s dead body. Also, Queen Eurydice commits suicide after she
discovers her son is dead as a result of Creon’s unjust actions.
Antigone’s defining action is crucial to
the central conflict of the play. As Bainard Cowan discusses in “Tarrying with
the Tragedy: Hegel and His Critics,” Hegel writes about “Kollision” as “the
seriousness and importance of the situation in its special character can only
begin when its definiteness comes into prominence as an essential difference
and, by being in opposition to something else, is the basis of a collision.”[2]
According to Hegel, tragedy contains collision, or conflict, and the “special
character” is the motivating desire that drives characters into conflict, linking
them to a defining action–one moment that reveals this desire and the characters’
true nature that also shapes their fate. When Antigone buries Polynices, she rejects
Creon’s patriarchal law, all the while linking herself with imagery associated
with death. In short, the act of burying her brother determines who Antigone is–a
brave anti-authoritarian woman unafraid to challenge her elders, men, her
family, or the law. The burial reveals she is not afraid of a dead body or
death itself. In fact, she desires death only second to a proper burial for her
brother.
What’s more, burying Polynices foreshadows
Antigone’s fate as the play unfolds. After Creon orders her to be entombed as
punishment, dragging her “down to death alive” (958), the equivalent of being
buried alive, he delivers to Antigone the burial she so long desires in the
“death pit of the dead” (910). While still alive, she’s in despair, but she
commits suicide in the tomb, fully achieving the burial.
Antigone’s defining action provokes her
punishment and influences mirroring imagery later in the play. For example, the
tomb, which Antigone refers to as a “prison” (978), reflects upon her defining
action–wouldn’t have Antigone preferred it for Polynices to have a tomb? Didn’t
she try to create one for him? A feminist reading reveals that “Antigone’s
decision to act challenges the gender order that sustains Creon’s politics.”[3]
Thus, Creon places Antigone back in the tomb or prison of patriarchal law.
As a writer of flash fiction, I’m always
looking for ways to define a character through his or her actions and develop
corresponding imagery, revealing compelling truths about my characters, while
driving the story forward. Antigone inspired
a revision of my flash fiction text “The Ghost of Natalie Wood” In the story,
the protagonist Steven is afraid of losing his girlfriend, Eva, because he
can’t satiate her emotional and sexual desires. In the beginning, he wants to
keep his relationship alive. However, this belief turns out to be fleeting
since Steven–a very judgmental person–changes his mind about Eva as the story
unfolds. His defining action comes at the beginning when he dresses in a
judge’s robe to spend time with Eva, who plans to dress up as the deceased
Natalie Wood to spice up their sex life.
The judge’s robe is symbolic to the story
and represents how Steven is weighing whether he should stay with Eva or leave
her. For example, he remembers how thoughtful she behaves when they first met,
but he contrasts that version of her with the way she acts on a recent weekend
getaway when she seduces him on a dock. He sees her in a different light after that
weekend, and his opinion about her begins to change. Also, the judge’s robe
reveals that Steven is a judgmental person. He has a clear idea of what a woman
should behave like, and, once he gets to know Eva, she defies that image.
Steven faces conflict when Eva dresses up
as the deceased Natalie Wood–an actress he doesn’t think highly of–before
initiating sex. Not only does he realize he can’t quench Eva’s sexual desires,
but he realizes he no longer wants to. Eva turns him off with the way she romanticizes
Wood, the tragic Hollywood heroine, and looks to the taboo to become aroused–the
dead. Like Antigone, Steven faces death–though a metaphorical one–as he stares
at Eva mimicking the dead actress. Also like Antigone, Steven is an active, not
passive, protagonist who isn’t afraid to act with conviction. He gathers his
courage (with the help of some whiskey), faces his feelings about Eva, and he kills
the relationship after she pushes him past his breaking point. Through his
defining action–dressing up as a judge–Steven becomes a stronger, more engaging
character.
While the entombment and live burial imagery
and symbolism in Antigone are enticing,
I shied away from them since they are familiar. For example, Poe uses premature
burials in his stories “The Fall of the House of Usher”[4]
and “The Premature Burial.”[5]
Blockbuster movies have also drawn upon the image, including Quentin Tarantino’s
trilogy Kill Bill: Vol. 1, where
Black Mamba, played by Uma Thurman, wakes up in a coffin buried underground.
Black Mamba, a skilled martial arts expert, utilizes her training to break free
from the tomb by punching a hole in the coffin. By doing so, she symbolizes
that women have broken out of the box.[6]
While patriarchy is not fully extinct, the anti-authoritarian female archetype
refuses to be imprisoned in contemporary times. Good for her. I wouldn’t dare put
her back in her tomb.
In Antigone,
Sophocles created a unique defining action that could only belong to Antigone,
while supporting it with robust imagery symbolic to the play, working with in
one context to develop a complete framework. You, too, can look to Antigone to find inspiration to do so, as
I have attempted to do in “The Ghost of Natalie Wood.” How would you go about
doing so? For starters, you must understand your character and what his or her
fate will be. Next, allow the defining action to drive the character into
conflict. Then, draw upon relevant, corresponding images to reveal your
character’s desires through symbolic imagery, using supporting language. Remember
the defining action you develop must be an original, exciting premise that
works as a unifying whole, clueing the reader in to the characterization and
the fate of your central character or characters.
Bibliography
Cowan, Bainard, “Tarrying With the
Tragic, Hegel and His Critics,” in The
Tragic Abyss, ed. Glenn Arbery, 39–58. Dallas, Texas: Dallas Institute
Publications, 2004.
Hawkesworth, Mary, The Semiotics of
Premature Burial: Feminism in a Postfeminist Age, Signs 115 Vol. 29, No. 4 (Summer 2004): 961–985.
Poe, Edgar
Allan, “The Fall of the House of Usher,” in The
Complete Tails and Poems of Edgar Allan Poe, 231–245. New York: Vintage, 1975.
Poe, Edgar
Allan, “The Premature Burial,” in The
Complete Tails and Poems of Edgar Allan Poe, 258–268. New York: Vintage, 1975.
Sophocles, Antigone, in Three Theban Plays, translated by Robert Fagles, 55–128. New York:
Penguin, 1984.
Tarantino, Quentin, Kill Bill: Vol.1. DVD. Directed by Quentin Tarantino. Los Angeles,
CA: Miramax Films, 2003.
Author’s Note

Tiffany Sumner is a flash fiction writer, aspiring novelist, and degree-candidate in Rosemont College’s MFA in Creative Writing Program. Earlier this year, she relocated to Philadelphia by way of Brooklyn and is earning a living writing about shoes, mobile apps, education and taxes. Yes, taxes. She is a contributing fiction writer for Red Door Magazine and a pretty a-okay cook. Originally from Virginia, Tiffany lives in South Philly with her boyfriend and their two cats–Stitches and Madame Snugglewhiskers. Learn more about Tiffany on her blog Roja ChaCha.
[1] Sophocles, Antigone, 55–128. All text references are to lines of this edition.
[2] Cowan, Bainard, “Tarrying With the
Tragic, Hegel and His Critics,” 41.
[3] Hawkesworth, Mary, “The Semiotics of
Premature Burial: Feminism in a Postfeminist Age,” 979–980.
[4] Poe, Edgar Allan, “The Fall of the House
of Usher,” 231.
[5] Poe, Edgar Allan, “The Premature Burial,”
258.
[6] Tarantino, Quentin, Kill Bill:Vol.1, DVD.

