Antigone
PhilosophyDramaAncient

Antigone

by Slavoj Žižek

Publisher
Bloomsbury Academic
Pages
72
Language
English
Published
2016-10-20

Overview

<p>Antigone is universally celebrated as the ultimate figure of ethical resistance to the state power which oversteps its legitimate scope and as the defender of simple human dignity (more important than all political struggles). But is she really so innocent and pure? What if there is a dark side to her? What if Creon, the representative of state power, also has a valuable point to make? And what if both Antigone and Creon are part of a problem that only a popular intervention can confront?<br>Žižek's rewriting of this classic play confronts these issues in a practical way: not by theorizing about them, but by imagining an <i>Antigone</i> in which, at a crucial moment, the action takes a different turn, an <i>Antigone</i> along the lines of <i>Run, Lola, Run</i> or of Brecht's learning plays. <br>A brilliantly funny, moving and political piece for those who are interested in reading and watching <i>Antigone</i> in an entirely new way.</p>

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