Common Archetypes Common Archetypes The Mentor The Hero

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Common Archetypes

Common Archetypes

Common Archetypes • • • The Mentor The Hero The Warrior The Child The

Common Archetypes • • • The Mentor The Hero The Warrior The Child The Mother The Trickster The Herald The Self The Shadow The Maiden The Creator The Original Man

ARCHETYPES • • GOOD GUYS ALWAYS WEAR? BAD GUYS? WHO DIES 1 ST IN

ARCHETYPES • • GOOD GUYS ALWAYS WEAR? BAD GUYS? WHO DIES 1 ST IN HORROR FILMS? THE DUMB JOCK/BULLY THE NERD THE DITZY BLONDE THE SNOBBY MEAN GIRLS

ARCHETYPES

ARCHETYPES

The Hero • In it’s Greek origin, the hero/heroine represented any character that was

The Hero • In it’s Greek origin, the hero/heroine represented any character that was half god and half human. • Later hero and heroine came to refer to characters that, in the face of danger and adversity or from a position of weakness, display courage and the will for self-sacrifice. • Began as exemplifying courage/prowess later shifted to demonstrate good morality.

The Hero • Mythological examples of the hero include: Hercules, Achilles, Vainomonen, Gilgamesh, Noah

The Hero • Mythological examples of the hero include: Hercules, Achilles, Vainomonen, Gilgamesh, Noah • Present fictional examples include Harry Potter, Luke Skywalker

The Mentor • Also called the Old Man or Wise Old man or Woman.

The Mentor • Also called the Old Man or Wise Old man or Woman. • This type of character is typically represented as a kind and wise, older father-type figure who uses personal knowledge of people and the world to help tell stories and offer guidance. • He may occasionally appear as an absent-minded professor, losing track of his surroundings because of his thoughts. • The wise old man is often seen to be in some way "foreign", that is, from a different culture, nation, or occasionally, even a different time, than those he advises.

The Mentor • In mythology, this characteristic is generally given when one of the

The Mentor • In mythology, this characteristic is generally given when one of the gods comes to speak to a mortal. • Zeus, Odin, Hera, Dagda, are all examples of mentor gods/goddesses in different contexts. • In modern fiction, we see the mentor in characters like Yoda, Obi-Wan, Dumbledore, and Gandalf, and of course, Mr. Miagi.

The Warrior • The Warrior is that part of ourselves that protects emotional boundaries

The Warrior • The Warrior is that part of ourselves that protects emotional boundaries and asserts our needs in the world. • Stands where the King tells it to stand. • The King initiates it, gives it a cause, a mission -- as a general gives the soldier his mission. • The Warrior serves the King and follows the King's instructions to the letter. • Key words to describe the Warrior are duty, honor, loyalty, discipline, boundaries. • The Warrior's tool is the sword (or any equivalent weapon of protection and assertion, including, in martial arts, the human body).

The Warrior • Mythological examples include Mars, Athena, Thor, Launcelot. • Modern fictional examples

The Warrior • Mythological examples include Mars, Athena, Thor, Launcelot. • Modern fictional examples include too many to mention. Anyone who functions as a protector to the Hero. Han Solo?

The Child/The Innocent • The Child or the Innocent is a common archetype seen

The Child/The Innocent • The Child or the Innocent is a common archetype seen across all cultures and countries. • This archetype is usually represented by a human or a god who is considered an innocent without corruption. These characters generally represent hope, and provide wisdom which stems from their innocence.

The Child/The Innocent • Examples in mythology include Eros, Pandora, Baby New Year, etc.

The Child/The Innocent • Examples in mythology include Eros, Pandora, Baby New Year, etc. • Examples in fiction include Forest Gump, Frodo, Harry Potter, Rain Man, among others.

The Mother • The Goddess/ Great Mother archetype is one seen in many different

The Mother • The Goddess/ Great Mother archetype is one seen in many different mythologies. • The mother archetype is typically seen as both nurturing and caring, as well as volatile and tempermental. • The mother archetype is a celebration of the uniquely female act of creation, and is one of the oldest celebrated symbols in human existence.

The Mother • Hera or Terra, the Goddess, Isis, Tiamat, and many other images

The Mother • Hera or Terra, the Goddess, Isis, Tiamat, and many other images are seen in as mother or Great Mother figures. • In modern fiction any distinctly maternal figure is seen this way. • Galadriel from the Lord of the Rings. • Queen Elizabeth is regarded historically as a maternal figure, despite never having given birth herself.

The Trickster • The Trickster embodies the energy of mischief and the desire for

The Trickster • The Trickster embodies the energy of mischief and the desire for change. • Tricksters cut big egos down to size and, most importantly, provide comic relief that eases tension and brings the Hero (and the audience) down to earth. • They also work to make fun of/highlight hypocrisy. • Still, the Trickster's loyalty and motives can be in doubt. Is the Trickster an ally? An agent of the Shadow? Or an independent agent working to some private agenda? • This character is so dedicated to laughing at the "status quo" and mocking everything around him that his true motives can remain in doubt.

The Trickster • Loki, Hermes, Raven, Anansi, and Coyote are all excellent examples of

The Trickster • Loki, Hermes, Raven, Anansi, and Coyote are all excellent examples of the trickster archetype. • In modern fiction we see the trickster as the force of chaos in the universe, not necessarily evil or good, just representative of change/chaos.

The Herald • The role of the herald is to announce the challenge which

The Herald • The role of the herald is to announce the challenge which begins the hero on his story journey. • The herald is the person or piece of information which upsets the sleepy equilibrium in which the hero has lived and starts the adventure. • The herald need not be a person. It can be an event or force: the start of a war, a drought or famine, or even an ad in a newspaper.

The Herald • Gandalf functioned this way • Hermes, Mercury, Archangel Gabriel are all

The Herald • Gandalf functioned this way • Hermes, Mercury, Archangel Gabriel are all good examples of this type of category.

The Shadow • The Shadow archetype is a negative figure, representing things we don't

The Shadow • The Shadow archetype is a negative figure, representing things we don't like and would like to eliminate. • The shadow often takes the form of the antagonist in a story. But not all antagonists are villains; sometimes the antagonist is a good guy whose goals disagree with the protagonist's. If the antagonist is a villain, though, he's a shadow.

The Shadow • The shadow is the worthy opponent with whom the hero must

The Shadow • The shadow is the worthy opponent with whom the hero must struggle. In a conflict between hero and villain, the fight is to the end; one or the other must be destroyed or rendered impotent. • While the shadow is a negative force in the story, it's important to remember that no man is a villain in his own eyes. In fact, the shadow frequently sees himself as a hero, and the story's hero as his villain. • Many modern novels, comics, movies, etc have taken to using this idea to entertain a new slant on an old story.

The Maiden • The maiden archetype represents purity, innocence, and, in all likelihood, naivete.

The Maiden • The maiden archetype represents purity, innocence, and, in all likelihood, naivete. • Think Disney princess… (the early ones, not the more recent empowered ones. )

The Creator • The Creator archetype is often the allpowerful omniscient figure responsible for

The Creator • The Creator archetype is often the allpowerful omniscient figure responsible for the condition of the world. • In many works his/her/its motivations are unclear, and the answers given (when given) are cryptic riddles at best.

The Original man • The first ‘man’ to walk the earth. • His is

The Original man • The first ‘man’ to walk the earth. • His is a journey of discovery and often ‘naming. ’ • His journeys typically explain the most basic foundations and functions in day to day living for a culture. • The base standard for morality is determined here.