the protagonist is Mathilde, and I think she's the antagonist too.
Artie is, Maus is ultimately the story of what happend in his parents lives that caused his mother to commit sucide, and his father to be the way that he is. Artie is on a journey to find the truth, and the antagonist would be society.
Looking at it in a more symbolic way the true antagonist of the story is the justice system of our country
short story
You could say that the antagonist in WSS is hate or racisim or predjudice because it is very hard to narrow it down to one person
There is no such thing as a short story called Hamlet. There is a play by this name, but plays are not the same thing as short stories.
The protagonist is Laurie, and the antagonist is Charles.
The protagonist is Lizabeth and for the antagonist, it can be look at in many different ways Liz vs. Society, Liz vs. person Liz vs. self
The protagonist is the hero of the story, the person the story is about. His opponent is the "antagonist", the villain of the story.
The antagonist in Moby Dick is the whale.In the story of Peter Pan, Captain Hook is the antagonist.The antagonist in the story poses direct opposition to the protagonist in the story.
A character who is opposed or competes the main character. * is called the antagonist while the main character is called the protagonist,
it is Ralph Underhill because he is the one who the protagonist, Doug, wants to kill
To provide obstacles for the protagonist
protaganist
The characters in a story typically include the protagonist, who is the main character that drives the plot forward, and the antagonist, who opposes the protagonist and creates conflict. The protagonist is usually the character with whom the audience is meant to sympathize, while the antagonist provides obstacles for the protagonist to overcome.
No, the main character is typically the protagonist of a story. The protagonist is usually the central figure who drives the plot forward and is involved in the main conflict. The antagonist is the character who opposes or creates conflict for the protagonist.
Yes, a protagonist can exist without a clear antagonist. In some stories, the conflict may come from within the protagonist themselves or from external challenges rather than a specific antagonist. The absence of a traditional antagonist does not diminish the importance or impact of the protagonist's journey.
A protagonist is least likely to be an antagonist, as the antagonist is typically the character who opposes the protagonist and creates conflict in the story.