The Archetypal Approach
The Archetypal Approach
The archetypal approach to literature evolved from studies in anthropology and psychology.
Archetypal critics make the reasonable assumption that human beings all over the world have
basic experiences in common and have developed similar stories and symbols to express these
experiences. Their assumption that myths from distant countries might help to explain a work of
literature might seem a little far-fetched. However, critics of this persuasion believe it is valid.
Carl Jung (1875-1961), a student of Freud, came to the conclusion that some of his patients' -
dreams contained images and narrative patterns not from their personal unconscious but from the
collective unconscious of the human race. It was Jung who first used the term archetype to
denote plots, characters, and symbols that are found in literature, folk tales and dreams
throughout the world. Some of the principal archetypes are described in the following
paragraphs.
According to Joseph Campbell, the story of the hero is the monomyth, or the one story at the
bottom of all stories. The hero is called to adventure. This means that the hero must go on a
quest. The first stage of the quest is separation: in this stage the hero separates from familiar
surroundings and goes on a journey. The second stage of the quest is initiation: the hero may
fight a dragon, conquer an enemy or in some other way prove his or her courage, wisdom and
maturity. The final stage is the return: the hero must return to society to use the courage and
wisdom gained in the initiatory phase. Often the initiation involves a journey to the underworld,
and the return phase is regarded as a kind of rebirth. This links the myth of the hero to the next
archetypal motif. (Mary Renault's The King Must Die (1958) is a good actualization of this
pattern.)
Many myths from around the world reflect the cycle of the seasons. Sometimes mythic thought
requires a sacrifice so that the seasons can continue. A sacrificial hero (in myth it is usually a
god or king) accepts death or disgrace so that the community can flourish. Although the
sacrifice is real, it is not necessarily to be regarded as final: the god who dies in the winter may
be reborn in the spring. Characters like Oedipus and Hamlet, who sacrifice themselves to save
their kingdoms, are based on the archetype of the dying god. Shirley Jackson's "The Lottery"
reflects this archetypal pattern in a contemporary setting.
Culture founders are heroes who invent rules, laws, customs, and belief systems so that society
can function and people can live. Prometheus was the great culture founder of the Greeks. He
created mankind and invented writing, mathematics, and technology so that human beings could
survive. Because he stole fire from the gods and gave it to men, he also became a sacrificial
hero, condemned to be tortured in the Caucasus Mountains until he was freed by Heracles.
Modern characters who derive from the culture hero archetype would include Mr. Antrobus in
The Skin of Our Teeth and Finny in A Separate Peace. Both of these characters are creative
inventors, organizers, and leaders. The antithesis of the culture hero is the trickster.
Representing the forces of chaos, the trickster delights in mischief. At times the trickster may
appear evil, but the essential quality embodied by this archetype is childishness. Hermes is the
trickster in Greek myth; Loki, in Norse myth. Native American myths have many trickster
figures. In William Golding's Lord of the Flies Ralph's culture-founding efforts are constantly
subverted by Jack, a trickster figure who is motivated only by the idea of fun. The female
trickster contrasts with the earth goddess figure in that she devotes herself to pleasure rather than
nurturing: she is referred to as the outlaw female or witch. Medea comes close to epitomizing
this archetype.
Earth, water, fire, air: these are the symbolic elements that compose the world. Earth usually has
the connotations of nurturing life. Water may purify, and flowing rivers represent the flow of
life; but water may also destroy when it is uncontrolled, as in a flood. Fire represents
destruction, but it can also purify and make way for the new. Air is the spiritual element; words
denoting the spirit are often derived from the words for wind.
The other term for archetypal criticism is myth criticism. Literary critics, poets, and storytellers
all use myths in the creation and interpretation of literature. This reflects their belief that the old
myths, far from being falsehoods, reveal eternal truths about human nature.