archetypal or myth criticism patterns that transcend time and geography

39
ARCHETYPAL or MYTH CRITICISM patterns that transcend time and geography

Upload: amberlynn-murphy

Post on 27-Dec-2015

219 views

Category:

Documents


1 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: ARCHETYPAL or MYTH CRITICISM patterns that transcend time and geography

ARCHETYPAL or MYTH CRITICISM

patterns that transcend time and geography

Page 2: ARCHETYPAL or MYTH CRITICISM patterns that transcend time and geography

“Whether we listen with aloof amusement to thedreamlike mumbo jumbo of some red-eyedwitch doctor of the Congo, or read with cultivatedrapture thin translations from the sonnets of themystic Lao-tse; now and again crack the hardnutshell of an argument of Aquinas, or catchsuddenly the shining meaning of a bizarre Eskimofairy tale, it will be always the one, shape-shiftingyet marvelously constant story that we find.” (3)

Joseph CampbellHero With a Thousand Faces

Page 3: ARCHETYPAL or MYTH CRITICISM patterns that transcend time and geography

“We all travel, if not in space in time. And since the first strolling teller-of-tales enthralled his audience at the first campfire, we have all loved travelers and travelers’ tales. From Gilgamesh through Odysseus to Bilbo Baggins and Frodo, the epic journey and its hero continue to capture our imagination.”

Rodney StandenThe Changing Face of the Hero

Page 4: ARCHETYPAL or MYTH CRITICISM patterns that transcend time and geography

Archetypal critics account for a universality in literature by pointing to recurring patterns and images that appear so deeply embedded in the human mind and culture that they strike a responsive chord in everyone.

Page 5: ARCHETYPAL or MYTH CRITICISM patterns that transcend time and geography

Archetypal Criticism

also called Myth Criticismhas roots in anthropological and

psychological studies – Late 19th and early 20th centuries

Page 6: ARCHETYPAL or MYTH CRITICISM patterns that transcend time and geography

Sir James Frazer

Cambridge anthropologist examined primitive rituals that indicated

similar patterns of behavior and belief among diverse and widely separated cultures

Page 7: ARCHETYPAL or MYTH CRITICISM patterns that transcend time and geography

Frazer...

The Golden Bough: A Study in Magic and Religion (1922) - 12 volumes– explanation of motives behind customs

Italian people of the shores of Lake Nemi rule of kingly succession was to pluck the bough

from a sacred tree and then kill the old king in individual combat

– found this custom was similar or connection of other customs in other peoples

Page 8: ARCHETYPAL or MYTH CRITICISM patterns that transcend time and geography

Gilbert Murray

“Hamlet and Orestes” in The Classic Tradition in Poetry– found similarities in Shakespeare’s Hamlet

and the Greek Orestes both are sons of kings killed by younger kinsmen

who then marry the dead king’s wife both are driven by supernatural forces to avenge

their father’s death both end not only by slaying the new king but

also by being responsible for their mother’s death

Page 9: ARCHETYPAL or MYTH CRITICISM patterns that transcend time and geography

Murray...

explores connection in the mythic patterns underlying the Greek Orestes saga and the Scandinavian Hamlet story.– behind both is the “world-wide ritual story of

what we may call the Golden-Bough Kings” (Murray 228)

pattern identified by Frazer in which life is renewed through the slaying of an old monarch and succession by a new one.

Page 10: ARCHETYPAL or MYTH CRITICISM patterns that transcend time and geography

Carl Jung

psychologist student of Freud The Basic Writing of C.G. Jung first gave prominence to the term archetype

Page 11: ARCHETYPAL or MYTH CRITICISM patterns that transcend time and geography

Carl Jung

Collective Unconscious– Shared by all humans– an unconscious “which does not derive from

personal experience and is not a personal acquisition but is inborn” (Jung 289)

Page 12: ARCHETYPAL or MYTH CRITICISM patterns that transcend time and geography

Carl Jung

Archetypes– contents of the collective unconscious – defined as primordial or “universal images

that have existed since the remotest times” (Jung 288)

– formed during the earliest stages of human development

Page 13: ARCHETYPAL or MYTH CRITICISM patterns that transcend time and geography

Carl Jung

Although the theory may seem almost mystic, Jung found no other way to account for the appearance of nearly identical images and patterns in the mind of individuals from wholly different cultures and backgrounds.

Page 14: ARCHETYPAL or MYTH CRITICISM patterns that transcend time and geography

Jung...

Jung notes instances which suggest that – water is a symbol of the unconscious and the

action of descending to the water is a symbol of the frightening experience of confronting the depths of one’s unconscious.

dreams of Protestant clergymen legends of African tribes

Page 15: ARCHETYPAL or MYTH CRITICISM patterns that transcend time and geography

Jung...

Jung’s account of a patient who in 1906 related visions containing odd symbolic configurations.– later he encountered similar symbols in a

Greek papyrus first deciphered in 1910

Page 16: ARCHETYPAL or MYTH CRITICISM patterns that transcend time and geography

Jung

Theory of Individuation– A psychological “growing up”– A process of learning of one’s own

individuality A process of self-recognition which is essential to

becoming a well-balanced person– Neuroses are result of person’s failure to

confront and accept archetypal components of the unconscious

Page 17: ARCHETYPAL or MYTH CRITICISM patterns that transcend time and geography

Jung…

Inherited components of the psyche– Principles Archetypes

Animus Anima Shadow

Page 18: ARCHETYPAL or MYTH CRITICISM patterns that transcend time and geography

ANIMUS

Physical man Represents physical, brute strength of

man and his animal instincts Can be the “masculine” designation of

the female psyche

Page 19: ARCHETYPAL or MYTH CRITICISM patterns that transcend time and geography

ANIMA

The “soul image” The spiritual life-force The “living thing in man, that which lives

of itself and causes life…” “…the archetype of life itself” (Jung, Archetypes 26)

Feminine designation in the male psyche Associated with feelings, passions,

instinctive, unconscious aspect of the psyche

Page 20: ARCHETYPAL or MYTH CRITICISM patterns that transcend time and geography

SHADOW

The darker side of our unconscious self Inferior, less pleasing aspect of the personality Represents “the dangerous aspect of the

unrecognized dark half of the personality” (Jung, Two Essays 94)

Needs to be suppressed When projected, this archetype becomes

– The villain– The devil

Page 21: ARCHETYPAL or MYTH CRITICISM patterns that transcend time and geography

The theory of archetypes would explain not only such instances as these but also the similarity of myths and rituals found by Frazer, for archetypes are universal patterns from which myths derive.

Page 22: ARCHETYPAL or MYTH CRITICISM patterns that transcend time and geography

Joseph Campbell

Monomyth pattern

Page 23: ARCHETYPAL or MYTH CRITICISM patterns that transcend time and geography

Maud Bodkin

Archetypal Patterns in Poetry (1934)– among first literary studies in the

Jungian tradition– application of psychological

knowledge to works of literature

Page 24: ARCHETYPAL or MYTH CRITICISM patterns that transcend time and geography

Bodkin...

Rime of the Ancient Mariner– rebirth archetype – “night journey under the sea”

going down to the water (into depths of one’s own being) [death] precedes a “rebirth” into greater wisdom and self-knowledge

Jonah - biblical parallel

Page 25: ARCHETYPAL or MYTH CRITICISM patterns that transcend time and geography

Northrop Frye

Anatomy of Criticism: Four Essays (1957) Relies solely upon literature to draw the

archetypal patterns. Calls the theory of collective unconscious

an “unnecessary hypothesis in literary criticism” (Frye 112)

Page 26: ARCHETYPAL or MYTH CRITICISM patterns that transcend time and geography

Frye...

Shifts definition of archetype from psychological to the literary

Archetype is “a symbol, usually an image, which recurs often enough in literature to be recognized as an element of one’s literary experience as a whole” (Frye 365)

Page 27: ARCHETYPAL or MYTH CRITICISM patterns that transcend time and geography

Frye...

four types of literature (narrative patterns)– mythos

Unifying myth – analogous to seasons of year– to the story of the birth, death, and rebirth of

the mythic hero

Page 28: ARCHETYPAL or MYTH CRITICISM patterns that transcend time and geography

Frye...

Mythos of SUMMER: Romance– analogous to the birth and youthful

adventures of the mythic hero– suggests innocence and triumph– narrative of wish-fulfillment with good

character triumphing over bad Sir Gawain and the Green Knight Robin Hood old-fashioned cowboy movies

Page 29: ARCHETYPAL or MYTH CRITICISM patterns that transcend time and geography

Frye...

Mythos of AUTUMN: Tragedy– major movement toward the death or defeat

of the hero Oedipus King Lear

Page 30: ARCHETYPAL or MYTH CRITICISM patterns that transcend time and geography

Frye...

Mythos of WINTER: Irony or Satire– hero now absent– society is left without effective leadership or

sense of norms/values Swift’s A Modest Proposal

– social norms are turned upside down for artistic purposes

Conrad’s Heart of Darkness Kafka Camus

– sense of hopelessness and bondage

Page 31: ARCHETYPAL or MYTH CRITICISM patterns that transcend time and geography

Frye...

Mythos of SPRING: Comedy– rebirth of hero– renewal of life in which those elements of

society who would block the hero are overcome

– hero and heroine take their rightful place – order is restored

Shakespearian comedies

Page 32: ARCHETYPAL or MYTH CRITICISM patterns that transcend time and geography

Frye...

Every work of literature has its place within this scheme or myth.

Every piece of literature adds to the myth.

Page 33: ARCHETYPAL or MYTH CRITICISM patterns that transcend time and geography

Leslie Fiedler

Begins examination with literary works themselves, rather than with universal patterns

Concerned with defining unique cultural patterns within literature– An End to Innocence: Essays on Culture and Politics

(1955)– Love and Death in the American Novel (1962)

Page 34: ARCHETYPAL or MYTH CRITICISM patterns that transcend time and geography

Fiedler...

Uses insights of archetypal criticism to isolate patterns within literature of a given culture or author.

An End to Innocence– sees a single, though controversial,

archetype: “the mutual love of a white man and a colored…the

boy’s homoerotic crush, the love of the black…” (Fiedler 146)

Page 35: ARCHETYPAL or MYTH CRITICISM patterns that transcend time and geography

Fiedler...

Argues that where in European novels we would expect to find heterosexual passion, we discover same-sex relationship– James Fenimore Cooper

Natty Bumppo and Chingachgook (Leatherstocking novels – The Last of the Mohicans, The Deerslayer, etc.)

– Herman Melville Ishmael and Queequeg (Moby Dick)

– Mark Twain Huck and Jim (Adventures of Huckleberry Finn)

Page 36: ARCHETYPAL or MYTH CRITICISM patterns that transcend time and geography

Fiedler...

American pattern that may be limited historically

Is a pattern that repeats itself Seems widely shared at a level beneath

consciousness Is for Fiedler, “a symbol, persistent,

obsessive, in short, an archetype” (Fiedler 146)

Page 37: ARCHETYPAL or MYTH CRITICISM patterns that transcend time and geography

Bodkin, Maud. Archetypal Patterns in Poetry, London: Oxford UP, 1934.

Campbell, Joseph. The Hero With a Thousand Faces.New York: Pantheon, 1949.

Fiedler, Leslie. An End to Innocence: Essays on Cultureand Politics. Boston: Beacon, 1955.

--------. Love and Death in the American Novel. Cleveland:World, 1962.

Bibliography

Page 38: ARCHETYPAL or MYTH CRITICISM patterns that transcend time and geography

Frazer, Sir James George. The Golden Bough: A Study inMagic and Religion. 1922. New York: McMillan, 1940.

Frye, Northrop. Anatomy of Criticism: Four Essays. Princeton:Princeton UP, 1957.

Guerin, Wilfred L. et. al. A Handbook of Critical Approachesto Literature. 4th ed. New York: Oxford UP, 1999.

Jung, Carl Gustav. The Basic Writings of C.G. Jung. Ed. Violet Staub De Laszlo. New York: Modern, 1959.

Bibliography

Page 39: ARCHETYPAL or MYTH CRITICISM patterns that transcend time and geography

Murray, Gilbert. The Classical Tradition in Poetry. Cambridge:Harvard UP, 1927.

Standen, Rodney. The Changing Face of the Hero. Wheaton, IL:Theosophical Publishing House, 1987.

Bibliography