Catharsis is the dramatic function of the blind prophet Teiresias in the plays 'Oedipus the King' and 'Antigone'. Catharsis refers to a purification. Teiresias tells the people of Thebes of what hasn't been done, but must be done in order to remedy an impure situation. In the case of 'Oedipus the King', the city suffers because of a murderer in their midst. Teiresias says that the murderer of Theban King Laius must be banished. In the case of 'Antigone', the city suffers because of an insult to the gods. Theban King Creon refuses to respect god given traditions by burying the disloyal Theban dead. Teiresias says that the body of Creon's nephew Polyneices must be buried.
The Choragos is the leader of the chorus. His function in the third scene is to show the good points in the views of both Theban King Creon and Prince Haemon. But at the end, his function also becomes that of pointing out that Creon loses his son's support
Yes, Antigone thinks her decision through in "Antigone" by Sophocles (495 B.C.E. - 405 B.C.E.).Specifically, Theban Princess Antigone has her defense all ready for her conversations with her sister, Princess Ismene, and with their uncle, King Creon. Her interactions with her relatives in fact function as no more than one-way communications because she has no interest in another opinion. She anticipates the consequences of illegally burying her brother Polyneices and those of not doing so: capital punishment and welcome in the Underworld of the afterlife versus continued problems with Creon's reign and shunning in the afterlife.
The entrance of the chorus and the first example of entertainment and narration are the dramatic functions of the Parados in "Antigone" by Sophocles (495 B.C.E. - 405 B.C.E.).Specifically, the parados is the way by which the chorus members and leader first appear before the audience. They make their appearance after the prologue, which involves the main character with at least one other of the play's personages. They sing and narrate background information and cultural parallels by which the audience better understands and more deeply commits to the play's unfolding drama.
according to my calculations it is impossible to create a function like that :D
To entertain, explain and instruct is the role of the chorus in "Antigone" by Sophocles (495 B.C.E. - 405 B.C.E.).Specifically, the chorus is made up of the most accomplished and respected as well as the wisest Theban elders. The members know how to entertain through their skilled dancing and singing. They offer explanations for onstage events as well as for offstage and relevant past occurrences. They also take responsibility for making clear what is to be learned from the characters and events.
To suggest the workings of divine will and to point out Antigone's own unwise choices is the function of the chorus leader in Scene 2 of "Antigone" by Sophocles (495 B.C.E. - 405 B.C.E.).Specifically, the chorus leader describes Theban Princess Antigone as the unlucky daughter of cursed and disgraced former King Oedipus. He also criticizes her for her disloyalty to King Creon and for foolish, stubbornly passionate behavior. He adds no note of praise for Antigone's loyalty to divine will and Theban traditions. He therefore accepts what is happening to Antigone as divinely justified and her due.
Spongebob
with function memset
The charAt function returns the number of occurrences of a specified character in the input string.
The Perl Chomp function is a programming function that remove the "newline" character at the end of the string. One can use the Perl Chomp function to remove any character that has the same value as the current one.
Converts a character to integer (if it is a numeric character)
How the character creates an effect
The Choragos is the leader of the chorus. His function in the third scene is to show the good points in the views of both Theban King Creon and Prince Haemon. But at the end, his function also becomes that of pointing out that Creon loses his son's support
Yes, Antigone thinks her decision through in "Antigone" by Sophocles (495 B.C.E. - 405 B.C.E.).Specifically, Theban Princess Antigone has her defense all ready for her conversations with her sister, Princess Ismene, and with their uncle, King Creon. Her interactions with her relatives in fact function as no more than one-way communications because she has no interest in another opinion. She anticipates the consequences of illegally burying her brother Polyneices and those of not doing so: capital punishment and welcome in the Underworld of the afterlife versus continued problems with Creon's reign and shunning in the afterlife.
Answerchar (*funcp(int));
The entrance of the chorus and the first example of entertainment and narration are the dramatic functions of the Parados in "Antigone" by Sophocles (495 B.C.E. - 405 B.C.E.).Specifically, the parados is the way by which the chorus members and leader first appear before the audience. They make their appearance after the prologue, which involves the main character with at least one other of the play's personages. They sing and narrate background information and cultural parallels by which the audience better understands and more deeply commits to the play's unfolding drama.
getchar();