Yes, the protagonist and antagonist can be the same person in a story. This type of character is known as an antihero, who possesses both heroic and villainous qualities, creating internal conflict within the narrative.
An antagonist is the person, or thing acting against the protagonist, or hero. It does not have to be the same species as the protagonist, or even alive at all. The foil always is. The foil, is a character who has contrasting/complementary characteristics to the protagonist. It's easiest to think of Hamlet, and realize that although King Claudius was the antagonist, it was Laertes who played the foil. The foil can be the antagonist, or a side kick, or anywhere in between.
Think of them as two fighters in a boxing ring. One you are for and the other is going to punch him out cold, if he can. In a story, the same goes for the two that are at odds with each other.
No, the protagonist is almost always the main character (but not always). And it is true that he can be in conflict with himself (inner doubts, fears, duty-bound etc) but most often it is the antagonist that is in conflict with the main character.
The antagonist of the story "August heat" is August.The Protagonist of the story "august heat" is the winter snow.The theme of the story "august heat" would best represent strength and will power.the conflict of the story august heat is them trying to fight against the winter snow because they got trapped in. so they had to dig them self's out. Well august dug him and Percy out.
The antagonist has an accomplice essential to the crimeThe antagonist and the protagonist meet before the climaxThe crime is hidden until the climax
An antagonist is someone who is an adversary, or someone who offers opposition. The opposite of that is a protagonist. The opposite of antagonist is neither protagonist nor agonist. The opposite of antagonist is synagonist. The antagonist is your opponent in which you are both after the same thing, he is "fighting against you". The synagonist is a competitor, that you are competing with, as in a foot race. A protagonist is the main character in a play.
Wario is an anti-hero. Meaning he's neutral. He picks on Mario and Luigi along with his rumored brother Waluigi, but appears more as a protagonist than an antagonist. The same goes for Shadow the Hedgehog. He's an anti-hero as well as he appears a protagonist and an antagonist.
It is Oedipus who as protagonist and antagonist begins "Oedipus Rex" by Sophocles (495 B.C.E. - 405 B.C.E.).Specifically, the prologue serves to introduce the protagonist and the problem to be solved. Theban King Oedipus is the protagonist as the main character around whom all action centers and as the doer of great deeds. At the same time, he is the antagonist because he is his own worse enemy.
Protagonist, hero, narrator (if in 1st person.) However in some cases these don't have to be the same person.
No,link is the main protagonist and the character in the green hat and tunic that you ply in the games, and zelda is the princess that you usually have to save from the main antagonist Ganondorf.
Sorry but Percy will not be the protagonist. Because this will be narrated by the same characters, so to the person who answered "he might be" quit your lies.
Roxas and Sora were really the same person, and Sora had a much larger role, so Sora was the real protagonist of the game.