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Archetypal Symbols
Cautionary note: The archetypes and symbolic meanings that follow are merely common
and representative, that is, by no means exhaustive. These images do not function as
archetypes each time they appear in literature; rather, their meaning will vary somewhat
according to their contexts.
A. Archetypal images:
1. Water: the mystery of creation; birth-death-resurrection; purification and
redemption; fertility and growth. According to Carl Jung, water is most common
symbol for the unconscious.
a) The Sea: the mother of all life; spiritual mystery and infinity; death and
rebirth; timelessness and eternity; the unconscious.
b) Rivers: death and rebirth (baptism); the flowing of time into eternity;
transitional phases of the life cycle; incarnations of deities.
2. Sun (fire and sky are closely related): creative energy; law in nature;
consciousness (thinking, enlightenment, wisdom, spiritual vision); father principle
(moon and earth tend to be associated with the mother principle); passage of
time and life.
a) Rising sun: birth; creation; enlightenment
b) Setting sun: death
3. Colors:
a) Red: blood, sacrifice, violent passion, disorder
b) Green: growth, sensation, hope, fertility, in ironical context may be
associated with death and decay
c) Blue: usually highly positive, associated with truth, religious feeling,
spiritual purity, security
d) White, highly multivalent; signifying in its positive aspects light, purity,
innocence, and timelessness; signifying in its negative aspects, death,
terror, the supernatural, and the blinding truth of an inscrutable cosmic
mystery as in “The Whiteness of the Whale” chapter in Moby Dick
e) Black (darkness): chaos, mystery, the unknown, death, primal wisdom, the
unconscious, evil, melancholy
4. Circle (sphere): wholeness, unity
a) Mandela (a geometric figure based upon the squaring of a circle around a
unifying center; the desire for spiritual unity and psychic integration. In
classical forms features the juxtaposition of the triangle, the square, and
the circle with their numerical equivalents of three, four, and seven.
b) Egg (oval): the mystery of life and the forces of generation
c) Yang-Yin- the Chinese symbol representing the union of opposite forces of
the Yang (masculine principle: light, activity, the conscious mind) and the
Yin (the feminine principle: darkness, passivity, and the unconscious
mind).
d) Ouroboros: the ancient symbol of a snake biting its own tail, signifying the
eternal cycle of life, primordial unconsciousness, the unity of opposing
forces (as in Yang-Yin).
5. Serpent (snake or worm): symbol of energy and pure force (cf. libido); evil,
corruption, sensuality; destruction; mystery; wisdom; the unconscious.
6. Numbers:
a) Three: light; spiritual awareness and unity (cf. The Holy Trinity); the male
principle.
b) Four: associated with the circle, life cycle, four seasons; female principle,
earth, nature; four elements (earth, air, fire, water).
c) Seven: the most potent of all symbolic numbers – signifying the union of
three and four, the complement of the cycle, the perfect order.
7. The archetypal woman (Great Mother- the mysteries of life, death, and
transformation):
a) The Good Mother (positive aspects of the Earth Mother): associated with
the life principle, birth, warmth, nourishment, protection, fertility, growth,
abundance (for example, Demeter, Ceres).
b) The Terrible Mother: the witch, sorceress, siren, whore, femme fatale –
associated with sensuality, sexual orgies, fear, danger, darkness,
dismemberment, emasculation, death; the unconscious in its terrifying
aspects.
c) The Soul Mate: the Sophia figure, Holy Mother, the princess or “beautiful
lady” – incarnation of inspiration and spiritual fulfillment (cf. Jungian
anima)
8. The Wise Old Man (savior, redeemer, guru): personification of the spiritual
principle, the representing, Carl Jung says, “ knowledge, reflection, insight,
wisdom, cleverness, and intuition on the one hand, and on the other hand, moral
qualities such as goodwill and readiness to help, which make his “spiritual”
character sufficiently “plain." What is more, he even tests the moral qualities of
others and makes gifts dependent on this test. The old man always appears
when the hero is in a hopeless and desperate situation from which only profound
reflection or a lucky idea can extricate him. For internal and external reasons,
though, the hero can not accomplish this himself; the knowledge he needs to
compensate for his deficiency comes in the form of a personified thought, i.e., in
the shape of his sagacious and helpful old man.”
9. Garden: paradise; innocence; unspoiled beauty (especially feminine); fertility.
10. Tree: denotes life of the cosmos; its growth, proliferation, generative and
regenerative processes. It stands for inexhaustible life, and is, therefore,
equivalent to immortality.
11. Desert: spiritual acridity; death; nihilism, hopelessness
B. Archetypal Motifs or Patterns
1. Creation: perhaps the most fundamental of all archetypal motifs – virtually every
mythology is built on some account of how the Cosmos, Nature, and Man were
brought into existence by some supernatural Being or Beings.
2. Immortality: another fundamental archetype, generally taking one of two basic
narrative forms:
a) Escape from time: “Return to Paradise, the state of timeless bliss enjoyed
by man before his tragic Fall into corruption and mortality.
b) Mystical submersion into cyclical time: the theme of endless death and
regeneration – man achieves a kind of immortality by submitting the vast,
mysterious rhythm of Nature’s eternal cycle, particularly the cycle of the
seasons.
3. Hero archetypes (archetypes of transformation and redemption):
a) The quest: the hero (savior, deliver) undertakes some long journey during
which he must perform impossible tasks, battle with monsters, solve
unanswerable riddles, and overcome insurmountable obstacles to save
the kingdom and, perhaps, marry the princess.
b) Initiation: the hero undergoes a series of excruciating ordeals in passing
from ignorance and immaturity to social and spiritual adulthood, that, is in
achieving maturity and becoming a full-fledged member of his social
group.
The initiation most commonly consists of three distinct phases:
(1)
separation, (2) transformation, and (3) return. Like the quest, this is a
variation of the death-and-rebirth archetype.
c) The sacrificial scapegoat: the hero, with whom the welfare of the tribe or
nation is identified, must die to atone for the people’s sins and restore the
land to fruitfulness.
Examples of heroes: Moses, Hercules, Siegried, Luke Skywalker, and Arthur. In the
“standard the story” some of the following occur: (1) the hero is the child of
distinguished parents, usually the son of a king. (2) His origin is preceded by difficulties
such as prolonged barrenness, or secret intercourse of due to external prohibition or
obstacles. (3) During or before the pregnancy, there is a prophecy in the form of an
oracle, cautioning against his birth, and usually threatening danger to the father (or his
representative). (4) As a rule, he is surrendered to the water, often in a box of some sort.
(5) He is then saved by animals, or by lowly people (shepherds, for instance), and is
suckled by animals or a humble woman – literally or figuratively. (6) After he has grown
up, he finds his distinguished parents, in highly versatile fashion. (7) He takes revenge
on his father, on the one hand, and is acknowledged on the other. (8) Finally, he
achieves rank and honors.
C. Archetypes as Genres
In addition to appearing as images and motifs, archetypes may be found in even
more complex combinations as genres that conform with the major phases of
seasonal cycle
The correspondent genres for the four seasons follow:
a) The mythos of spring: comedy.
b) The mythos of summer: romance.
c) The mythos of fall: tragedy.
d) The mythos of winter: irony.
Finally, consider the following idea concerning. Myth is the organizing principle of
literary form, providing a diagram or blueprint of what literature as a whole is about, that
is, an imaginative survey of what is imaginatively conceivable in the human condition -
from the beginning to the end, from the height to the depth.
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