Can protagonist be an antagonist, and vise versa? [duplicate]

The dictionary lists these as antonyms, although the definitions of both don't really oppose each other.

I mean a case where the central figure of a story (and possibly simultaneously the narrator) is a black character, a meddler, evil guy with no redeeming values, who causes all the trouble, while the rest of the "crew", all secondary roles, are the opposition.

The traditional approach equates main character = the good guy = protagonist, and the opponent = "person causing problem" = the antagonist, but what if the protagonist is the one causing the problem?

What do we call the protagonist's opponents then? Or maybe one should cease to call the central character "protagonist"?


Solution 1:

Protagonist, as your sources appear to have told you, doesn't mean the "good guy"; it means the "first actor", the character whose fate, whether success or defeat, is the central interest of the story. It's a structural role, not an ethical one.

The western dramatic tradition is full of villainous protagonists, from its earliest days (Clytemnestra in Aeschylus' Agamemnon) through the Elizabethans (the title roles in Marlowe's Tamburlaine and Shakespeare's Richard III and Macbeth) down to the moderns (Brecht's Arturo Ui).

The "bad guy" is frequently the protagonist of comedies, too: Subtle in Jonson's The Alchemist, Harpagon in Moliére's The Miser.

Antagonist, on the other hand, does not necessarily denote a dramatically central character. Some works provide a black-hearted villain who threatens the protagonist or whose goals the protagonist must thwart; in others, however, the force opposing the protagonist may be collective, and dramatically more or less colourless (Richmond in Richard III), may be impersonal (a god or Fate or, as Kenneth Burke has observed of O'Neill's Mourning Become Electra, really an aspect of the scene), may even be in some sense folded into the protagonist herself (Racine's Phédre).

Bottom line: You pretty much have to have a protagonist, both for dramatic interest and to attract a star actor. An antagonist is dispensable.

EDIT: So there's always a protagonist (who is occasionally plural, as in Godot), good or evil or neither. If he has opponents there's no need to label them antagonists—you may call them simply opponents or rivals or whatever they happen to be. If he doesn't, you don't have to look for someone or something to fix that label on.

Solution 2:

The simple answer is no, the protagonist cannot be the antagonist, as the antagonist is defined by being opposed to the protagonist. They are antonym in that one opposes the other, but you could argue that they are a binary pair.

The protagonist is defined by being the character whose story we are following, and even if the protagonist is a bad guy, he is still the protagonist and his opponents are still antagonists.

In practice the protagonist very often is the good guy, but that is a pragmatic thing rather than a definition: the reader is more likely to cheer for the good guy. Making the protagonist a bad guy is much more difficult, but can be done.

The Tamburlaine mentioned by StoneyB does it by having the protagonist meeting his end through excessive pride, so we think "yeah... serves him right..." A similar device was used by John Ford for the incestuous Giovanni as the protagonist in 'Tis pity she's a Whore - he too dies.

Personally though, I think the ultimate 'bad guy protagonist' is Vladimir Nabokov's Humbert Humbert, the protagonist in Lolita, who is portrayed as such a likeable character that it is hard not to forgive him for his child abuse.

Solution 3:

I was taught that there were three basic plots: 1) Man against nature, 2) Man against man, and 3) Man against himself. In the third paradigm, "man against himself," the protagonist can also be the antagonist.