Archetypes Universal Patterns in Literature. Dr. Carl Jung, Swiss Psychologist “Father of Archetypes” circa 1960: Swiss pioneer of psychology Dr Carl.

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Presentation transcript:

Archetypes Universal Patterns in Literature

Dr. Carl Jung, Swiss Psychologist “Father of Archetypes” circa 1960: Swiss pioneer of psychology Dr Carl Gustav Jung ( ). (Photo by Hulton Archive/Getty Images)

Definition of Archetype ► Archetype is a Greek word meaning “original pattern, or model” (Webster’s Dictionary). ► Archetype is a Greek word meaning “original pattern, or model” (Webster’s Dictionary). ► Archetype is a character, an event, a story or an image that recurs in different works, in different cultures and in different periods of time. ► Can you think of any stories or image patterns that have been repeated in movies, books, or even commercials? {Hint: Nursery rhymes, Disney movies }

The Golden Age ► What do you think “The Golden Age” means? ► When you think of the word or the color gold, what kind of images do you think of?

PIETRO DA CORTONA, The Golden Age (Fresco, Sala della Stufa, Palazzo Pitti, Florence)

The End of Childhood  This archetype focuses on stories of both loss of innocence as well as the acquisition of knowledge.  “What is the meaning of “lost childhood” or “falling down”? In life, it is called “growing up.” That time when innocence somehow fades away and is replaced by experience or knowledge of the world.

 But in the imagination, it is the opening of a forbidden jar, the eating of a forbidden fruit, the death of a loved one, the destruction of something beautiful.  It is a story or an event that is a symbol of a universal human experience.  When such imaginative stories or events are so common as to be used over and over by many cultures, they are called archetypes” (Jewkes 142).

William Blake, “Songs of Innocence and of Experience” Interesting Note: Blake’s poetry inspired the lyrics and band name of The Doors… “the doors of perception” Artwork from Blake’s “The Marriage of Heaven & Hell”

John Milton’s “Paradise Lost” Interesting Note: You WILL read the whole thing in college!

The Cataracts of Heaven Though you might have heard the word “cataracts” in terms of clouding one’s vision, the word cataract can also mean a great flood. What is the story of the flood from heaven that you know? What did it result in? Though you might have heard the word “cataracts” in terms of clouding one’s vision, the word cataract can also mean a great flood. What is the story of the flood from heaven that you know? What did it result in? “…there is one story pattern, or archetype, which tells [an abbreviation of] the entire imaginative story of the human race. It is the story of the “flood”—a cycle of birth, death, and rebirth (Jewkes 174). “…there is one story pattern, or archetype, which tells [an abbreviation of] the entire imaginative story of the human race. It is the story of the “flood”—a cycle of birth, death, and rebirth (Jewkes 174).

Changes People can become something else. They experience a “metamorphosis” physically, emotionally or spiritually. In ‘reality’ we are subject to the changes of time, but we can imagine the changes that are not [subject to the changes of time” (Jukes 229).

The Human Year Spring - the time of planting and growth is related in the imagination to youth, hope, courtship and love. Spring - the time of planting and growth is related in the imagination to youth, hope, courtship and love. Summer - a time of ripening, is related to the maturing of relations, to comradeship and community, to fertility and passion. Summer - a time of ripening, is related to the maturing of relations, to comradeship and community, to fertility and passion.

The Human Year Fall - the time of harvest, related to reflection and declining vigor. Fall - the time of harvest, related to reflection and declining vigor. Winter - when the earth seems sterile, related to death and emptiness” (Jewkes 302). Winter - when the earth seems sterile, related to death and emptiness” (Jewkes 302).

Archetypal Symbols ► WATER – birth/death/resurrection; creation; purification & redemption; fertility & growth. ► SEA/OCEAN - the mother of all life; spiritual mystery; death and/or rebirth; timelessness & eternity. ► RIVERS - death and rebirth (baptism); the flowing of time into eternity; transitional phases of the life cycle. ► Sun (fire and sky are closely related) - creative energy; thinking, enlightenment, wisdom, spiritual vision.  Rising sun = birth, creation, enlightenment  Setting sun = death

Archetypal Colors ► Red - blood, sacrifice, passion; disorder. ► Green - growth, hope, fertility. ► Blue - highly positive; secure; tranquil; spiritual purity. ► Black - darkness, chaos, mystery, the unknown, death, wisdom, evil, melancholy. ► White - light, purity, innocence, timelessness; [negative = death, terror, supernatural] ► Yellow - enlightenment, wisdom.

Archetypal Numbers ► 3 - light, spiritual awareness, unity (the Holy Trinity); male principle. ► 4 - associated with the circle, life cycle, four seasons; female principle, earth, nature, elements. ► 7 - the most potent of all symbolic numbers signifying the union of three and four, the completion of a cycle, perfect order, perfect number; religious symbol.

Archetypal Symbols ► Serpent (snake, worm) - symbol of energy and pure force; evil, corruption, destruction. ► Wise old Man - savior, redeemer, guru, representing knowledge, reflection, insight, wisdom, intuition, and morality. ► Garden - paradise, innocence, unspoiled beauty. ► Tree - denotes life of the cosmos; growth; proliferation; symbol of immortality; phallic symbol. ► Desert - spiritual aridity; death; hopelessness.

Creation - All cultures believe the Cosmos was brought into existence by some Supernatural Being (or Beings). Seasons Spring - rebirth; genre/comedy. Summer - life; genre/romance. Fall - death/dying; genre/tragedy. Winter - without life/death; genre/irony. The Great Fish - divine creation/life. Archetypal Symbols

Eight Archetypal Characters 1. Protagonist – hero or “good guy” 2. Antagonist – villain or “bad guy” 3. Voice of Reason – usually a friend or relative of hero or main character 4. Emotion – the “drama queen or king” 5. Sidekick – often the “foil” character 6. Skeptic – plays “devil’s advocate” 7. Guardian – mentor/teacher/mother/father 8. Contagonist - stalls or delays hero