Answer:
The tragic heroine.
Explanation:
The tragic heroine archetype is the female protagonist who possesses a fatal flaw and makes wrongful judgments that led to her downfall, and even that of others around her.
The two excerpts from "The Royal House of Thebes" and "The Story of a Warrior Queen" show the tragic heroine in the characters of Antigone and Boadicea. Here, both women are shown them acting in their best interests but at the same time, also resulted in the death or suffering of their near ones. Boadicea takes her life and also that of her daughters while Antigone's act of going against the king to bury her brother led to the suffering of her sister Ismene too.
Thus, the correct answer is the tragic heroine.
Gatsby is desperately searching for someone who knows Daisy. When he finds out from Jordan Baker that Nick Carraway is Daisy cousin, Gatsby latches on to him in an effort to get Daisy back. Everything he does is for Daisy.
Anne Sullivan, while describing her struggle to work with a young Helen Keller, wrote, "...the more I think, the more certain I am that obedience is the gateway through which knowledge, yes, and love, too, enters the mind of the child."