Dictionary Definition
archetypal adj : representing or constituting an
original type after which other similar things are patterned;
"archetypal patterns"; "she was the prototypal student activist"
[syn: archetypical,
prototypal, prototypic, prototypical]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Adjective
- Of or pertaining to an archetype.
Extensive Definition
An archetype (pronounced:
/ˈarkətaɪp/) is a generic, idealized
model of a person, object, or concept from which similar instances
are derived, copied, patterned, or emulated. In psychology, an
archetype is a model of a person, personality, or behavior. This
article is about personality archetypes, as described in literature
analysis and the study of the psyche.
In the analysis of personality, the term
archetype is often broadly used to refer to
- a stereotype—personality type observed multiple times, especially an oversimplification of such a type; or
- an epitome—personality type exemplified, especially the "greatest" such example.
- a literary term to express details.
However, in a strict linguistic sense, an
archetype is merely a defining example of a personality type. The
accepted use of archetype is to refer to a generic version of a
personality. In this sense "mother figure" can be considered an
archetype and instances can be found in various female characters
with distinct (non-generic) personalities.
Archetypes have been present in folklore and literature for
thousands of years and appear to be present in prehistoric artwork.
The use of archetypes to analyze personality was advanced by
Carl
Jung early in the 20th
century. The value in using archetypal characters in fiction derives from the fact
that a large group of people are able to unconsciously recognize
the archetype, and thus the motivations, behind the character's
behavior.
Etymology
The word archetype appeared in European texts as early as 1545. It derives from the Latin noun archetypum and that from the Greek noun αρχέτυπον (archetypon) and adjective αρχέτυπος (archetypos), meaning "first-moulded". The Greek roots are arkhe- ("first" or "original") + typos ("model", "type", "blow", "mark of a blow").Pronunciation note: The "ch" in archetype is a
transliteration
of the Greek chi () and is most commonly articulated in English as
a "k".
Jungian archetypes
The concept of psychological archetypes was
advanced by the Swiss psychiatrist Carl Jung, c.
1919. In
Jung's psychological framework archetypes are innate, universal
prototypes for ideas and may be used to interpret observations. A
group of memories and interpretations associated with an archetype
is a complex,
e.g. a mother complex associated with the mother archetype. Jung
treated the archetypes as psychological organs, analogous to
physical ones in that both are morphological constructs that arose
through evolution.
Jung outlined four main archetypes:
- The Self, the regulating center of the psyche and facilitator of individuation
- The Shadow, the opposite of the ego image, often containing qualities that the ego does not identify with but possesses nonetheless
- The Anima, the feminine image in a man's psyche; or:
- The Animus, the masculine image in a woman's psyche
- The Persona
Although the number of archetypes is limitless,
there are a few particularly notable, recurring archetypal images:
- The Syzygy
- The Child
- The Hero
- The Great Mother
- The Wise old man
- The Trickster or Fox
- The Puer Aeternus (Latin for "eternal boy")
- The Cosmic Man
- The artist-scientist
- The Scarlet Women
- The Faceless Man
Archetypes in literature
Archetypes can be found in nearly all forms of literature; with their motifs being predominantly rooted in folklore.William
Shakespeare is known for creating many archetypal characters
that hold great Eurocentric (chiefly British) social importance
such as Hamlet, the
self-doubting hero and the initiation archetype with the three
stages of separation, transformation, and return; Falstaff, the
bawdy, rotund comic knight; Romeo and Juliet, the
ill-fated ("star-crossed") lovers; Richard
II, the hero who dies with honor; and many others. Although
Shakespeare based many of his characters on existing archetypes
from fables and myths (e.g., Romeo and Juliet
on Pyramus
and Thisbe), Shakespeare's characters stand out as original by
their contrast against a complex, social literary landscape. For
instance, in The Tempest,
Shakespeare borrowed from a manuscript by William Strachey that
detailed an actual shipwreck of the Virginia-bound
17th-century English sailing vessel Sea Venture
in 1609 on the islands of Bermuda. Shakespeare also borrowed
heavily from a speech by Medea in Ovid's Metamorphoses
in writing Prospero's
renunciative speech; nevertheless, the unique combination of these
elements in the character of Prospero created a new interpretation
of the sage magician as that of a carefully plotting hero, quite
distinct from the wizard-as-advisor archetype of Merlin or Gandalf (both of
which may be derived from priesthood authority archetypes from the
Bible such as Abraham, Moses, Isaiah, Elijah, etc).
Certain common methods of character depiction
employed in dramatic performance rely on the pre-existence of
literary archetypes. Stock
characters used in theatre or film are based on highly generic
literary archetypes. A pastiche is an imitation of an
archetype or prototype in order to pay homage to the original
creator.
In the superhero genre, two main archetypes are
Spider-Man and
Superman.
Superman represents the old, bright and optimistic view of
superheroes who were both physically and morally perfect (e.g. they
would always do the right thing). Spider-Man represents the more
realistic, cynical view where superheroes are simply regular people
with extraordinary powers (i.e. they can be selfish and immature at
times, while self-sacrificing and noble at others).
The young, flawed, and brooding antihero [Spider-Man] became
the most widely imitated archetype in the superhero genre since the
appearance of Superman.
Bradford W. Wright, Comic Book Nation: The
transformation of Youth Culture in America 212
Superman on the Couch by Danny Fingeroth
151
See also
References
Sources
- Campbell, Joseph, The Masks of God: Vol. I, Premitive Mythology. (1991 reprint revised ed.), New York: Penguin Group Inc.
- Jung, C. G., (1934–1954). The Archetypes and The Collective Unconscious. (1981 2nd ed. Collected Works Vol.9 Part 1), Princeton, N.J.: Bollingen. ISBN 0-691-01833-2
- Arrien, Angeles (1992). Signs Of Life: The Five Universal Shapes And How To Use Them. Sonoma, CA, USA: Arcus Publishing Company. ISBN 0-916955-10-9
- The hero within: six archetypes we live by
archetypal in Bulgarian: Архетип
archetypal in Catalan: Arquetip
archetypal in Czech: Archetyp
archetypal in Danish: Arketype
archetypal in German: Archetypus
archetypal in Estonian: Arhetüüp
archetypal in Spanish: Arquetipo
archetypal in Esperanto: Arketipo
archetypal in Persian: کهنالگو
archetypal in French: Archétype
archetypal in Croatian: Arhetip
archetypal in Italian: Archetipo
archetypal in Hebrew: ארכיטיפ
archetypal in Kazakh: Архетип
archetypal in Kurdish: Arketîp
archetypal in Dutch: Archetype (model)
archetypal in Japanese: 元型
archetypal in Norwegian: Arketype
archetypal in Occitan (post 1500):
Arquetipe
archetypal in Polish: Archetyp
(psychologia)
archetypal in Portuguese: Arquétipo
archetypal in Russian: Архетип
archetypal in Simple English: Archetype
archetypal in Slovak: Archetyp
archetypal in Serbian: Архетип
archetypal in Finnish: Arkkityyppi
archetypal in Swedish: Arketyp
archetypal in Turkish: Arketip
archetypal in Ukrainian: Архетипи
archetypal in Chinese: 原型