Adam Oliver

Dr. Frost

Honors Cultural Perspectives 101

24 September 2004

Leadership in the Aeneid and Antigone

Throughout Sophocles’ Antigone and Vergil’s Aeneid the characters of Aeneas, Dido, Antigone, and Creon display various leadership qualities that define their effectiveness as leaders in their respective contexts.  However, in determining the most effective leader from this group, one must establish an objective standard by which to compare all characters.  Considering the vastly different societies from which the characters of the Aeneid and Antigone arise, both the standards of Platonic Greek society and the standards of Roman society should be used.  According to the Greek standard of arête, defined as the display of courage, honor, virtue, and manliness, Aeneas and Antigone exemplify the most effective leadership.  According to Roman standard of stoicism, however, Aeneas displays the most effective leadership showing the leadership of even Antigone to be inferior as he exhibits Roman stoic virtues almost perfectly.

        In Greek society the standards of leadership involved a concept known as arête, which serves as a basic definition of manliness in Greek society.  Given the profoundly gender defined society that existed in Greece, it is not surprising that the qualities of a strong leader mirror those of an upstanding male.  Arête basically contains four parts--courage, honor, virtue, and manliness.  The first of these qualities, courage, deals with a person’s ability to stand up to danger or trying circumstances.  While courage finds its most prominent display on the battlefield, facing up to difficult leadership decisions can also be a method of showing courage.  Honor, a key part of arête, can be obtained by honoring the gods, thus staying on their favorable side.  By serving one’s community and state, one may also earn honor through either humble or glorified service. Virtue, perhaps the most interesting of the arête qualifications, has nothing to do with the modern definition of virtue which one might compare to morality, but rather involves looking out for the best interest of one’s state.  Finally, manliness served as a key qualification of leadership in Greek society.  In the very patriarchal Greek society, it is not surprising that manliness would be found as a qualification for an effective leader.

        For the aspect of courage, Antigone rises to the forefront as one who faces down fierce opposition to what she believes.  Even in the face of certain death, Antigone displays unrivaled courage in protecting the burial rights of her brother, Polynices.  She displays her courage as she speaks to her sister about her unwillingness to help preserve Polynices’ burial rights saying, “So, do as you like, whatever, suits you best—I will bury him myself.  And even if I die in the act, that death will be glory.  I will lie with the one I love and loved by him—an outrage sacred to the gods!” (Antigone 63).  Her resolve never fades even as the guards lead her off to her final resting place.  Antigone’s courage finds rival only in Aeneas.  His courage as a warrior in battle leads one to consider him, but his response when Mercury informs him that he should not be with Dido, attempting to run away before confronting her, portrays him as less courageous than the always faithful Antigone.  Like Antigone, Creon firmly stands by his convictions, but rather than out of courage, he stands by his convictions out of pride and a shallow attempt to preserve his self respect.  Dido’s courage finds itself masked by her marked passion for Aeneas, but she does display courage as she confronts Aeneas as he attempts to leave her without explanation.  Her madness by the end of her life, however, prevents her from showing the kind of courage displayed by Antigone, even though both characters end their lives in similar manners.

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        Honor, as the second aspect of arête, can best be seen by observing how the characters honor the gods.  Clearly, Aeneas and Antigone prove honorable before the gods as they give up personal comforts or pleasures for the desires of the gods.  Aeneas shows himself to be more honorable than Antigone, however, as his sacrifice lives purely in the desire to follow his destiny set forth by the gods.  Despite his great love for Dido, he almost immediately surrenders his every desire for her in order to follow his destiny to Rome.  In his defense for leaving to Dido, Aeneas ...

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