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Archetypes Overview

English Language Arts. Archetypes Overview. Archetypes.

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Archetypes Overview

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  1. English Language Arts Archetypes Overview

  2. Archetypes • Literature and film can be classified into different genres. Many short stories, novels, poems, plays and films share common features even though they were written by people from different parts of the world and at different times in history. • These recurring images, character types, symbols and narrative patterns are called ARCHETYPES. • Genres classify literature/film and archetypes are another method of classification albeit a more complex and intelligent method.

  3. Conventional Plot Patterns Archetypes (Recurring Narrative Patterns)

  4. “Westerners” Quest/Adventure Stories “Rags to Riches”

  5. Creation Story Mistaken Identity

  6. “Monster-slaying Story” Wedding/Romance Loss of Innocence Story (death)

  7. Conventional Character Types Archetypes

  8. Wicked Witch Star-crossed lovers Hero • Victim

  9. Evil Step-mother Villain Teacher

  10. Child (and throughout various stages to adulthood) Damsel in Distress

  11. Plot Patterns Endings: Wedding, death, ride into sunset, murder solved etc.

  12. Symbols & Images • Water: creation, purification, redemption, fertility, growth • Rising Sun: wisdom, birth, enlightenment • Setting Sun: death • Garden: paradise, innocence, fertility • Tree: immortality • Desert: hopelessness, death, spiritual emptiness • Apple: knowledge, health • Snake: evil, temptation, sensuality • Rose: perfection, beauty • Circle: wholeness, unity • Red: blood, passion, sacrifice • Green: growth, fertility • Black: chaos, death, evil • White: purity, innocence

  13. Six Archetypes • Golden Age • God-Teacher/Hero • Loss of Innocence • Flood/Doomsday • Metamorphosis • Human Year

  14. GOLDEN AGE • The quest story – humanity’s ongoing search for paradise (people lose paradise and often begin a quest to regain the paradise lost) • Characteristics: • The Golden Age is based on the theory that there was a utopia, which was destroyed but can be regained • Happy endings are usually the result of this archetype • The “Quest Story” is usually associated with GA because the search for paradise is often a quest • Reference to the “good old days” is often the desire for a lost paradise (even if realizing after consideration that the old days were not so good) • In terms of the human year, GA is usually associated with spring or early summer • Abundance, growth, love, peace, and reconciliation are all associated with this archetype • Examples: Matrix, Lion King, Back to the Future, Shrek

  15. GOD-TEACHER/HERO • Characteristics: • Benevolent (charitable) with knowledge – willing to teach humans the answers to hidden mysteries • Intermediary – acts as a bridge between humans and a divine power • Model for human behaviour • May take the form of animals, teachers, visionaries, political leaders, religious leaders, and sport or film idols • In terms of the human year, GT is usually associated with summer • May offer themselves as sacrifice (in early myths they were punished for revealing mysteries • Examples: Helen Keller/Annie Sullivan, Yoda, Gandalf, Coach Carter

  16. END OF CHILDHOOD/LOSS OF INNOCENCE • Characteristics: • Stories about the origin of evil are end of childhood stories • Movement away from a sense of security, rosy outlook on life, and youth to a more cynical view of responsibility, greyer outlook on life, and awareness of aging • The end of childhood may come in the form of a personal tragedy, a rude awakening, or a shattered illusion. There is an awareness of loss – a favourite object is broken, a friend moves, beauty is lost • May come as an awareness of one’s own limitations. The realization that one cannot avoid death • May take the form of a new experience – first encounter with war, violence, crime, senseless destruction or a first love • The individual usually comes to realize a harsh truth and must deal with it • Initiation rites to welcome the child into the adult world are part of end of childhood • Examples: The Little Mermaid, To Kill a Mockingbird

  17. FLOOD/DOOMSDAY • Characteristics: • A story that shows decay and destruction, then the establishment of a new community. The earth and its inhabitants have come to the worst possible state of affairs • Water is a common image in stories containing this archetype. It destroys yet saves, takes and gives life • A method of rebirth is often included in these stories. This “ark” is a recurring detail and may take the form of a ship or some other vessel • This archetype offers hope. The people left after the destruction are good people. A new society, better than the last, will be the result • The flood is associated with winter • Examples: The Day After Tomorrow

  18. METAMORPHOSIS • A concept that deals with transformation. The “change” can be physical, emotional, mental, spiritual, social, etc. Usually metamorphosis occurs as part of a process, and can come about as part of a ritual. Metamorphosis can be beneficial or detrimental • Characteristics: • changes of form occur • wishes and dreams may become reality • fears and nightmares may become reality • similar to the direct comparison of metaphor • metaphor — this is this: “She is a rose” • metamorphosis — this becomes this: “She becomes a rose” • recognition that boundaries are not fixed (transformations may take place…) • emphasis is on the similarities in life rather than the differences • Examples: Dr. Jekyll, Mr. Hyde

  19. HUMAN YEAR • The use of natures cycles to express human emotion and feelings. • Examples: Freedom Writers & On Golden Pond

  20. All images obtained from “google images” via public domain

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