Humans bother you to surround in the family. You need a tête-à-tête with fate and death. And kill your father and sleep with your mother and learn all of this afterwards, greedily, word by word. What drink, huh, words that condemn you? And as they are greedily drinking when called Oedipus, or Antigone.
by Jean Anouilh
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In Anouilh's "Antigone," the narrative explores the heavy burdens that family and societal expectations can impose on individuals. The characters grapple with the weight of their familial connections and the inevitability of fate. The notion of engaging directly with one's destiny and mortality reflects a deeper existential struggle, suggesting that true understanding comes from confronting difficult truths, even those involving familial betrayal and tragedy.

The quote emphasizes a raw, visceral approach to personal and familial relationships, where intense actions symbolize a quest for knowledge and self-realization. It implies that through confronting the realities of death and one's own actions, individuals can achieve a deeper comprehension of life, as illustrated through the tragic figures of Oedipus and Antigone, who embody both suffering and enlightenment amid chaos.

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