The term
archetype in literary criticism defines recurring (happening again and again) narrative
designs, patterns of action, character types or images which are said to be
identifiable in a wide variety of works of literature, myths, dreams and social
rituals. Northrop Frye is the best known practitioner and spokesman of
archetypal or myth criticism.
Earnest
Cassirer, a social anthropologist was an important influence on myth criticism.
For Cassirer, reason alone cannot lead to truth, but mythical thinking which
focuses on immediate experience is essential. Another important influence was
Carl Gustav Jung (1875-1961) who used the term archetype to what he called
“primordial images”. According to him the “psychic residue” of the repeated
patterns of experience in the lives of our ancestors survives in the
“Collective Unconscious” of the human race. This is expressed in myth,
religion, dreams and private fantasies as well as in works of literature.
Important
practitioners of various modes of archetypal criticism are Maud Bodkin, Wilson Knight,
Robert Graves, Philip Wheel Wright, Richard Chase and Joseph Campbell. Northrop
Frye contributed the most to the mythic method, especially as a school of
criticism. In the introduction to his Anatomy of Criticism (1957), Frye argued
for a varied field of study called “archetypal criticism’” In this book the
four radical platforms correspond to four seasons in the cycle of natural
world. They are incorporated in the four major ‘genres’ of comedy (spring),
romance (summer), tragedy (autumn) and satire (winter). Frye expanded the
theory in his long series of later writings.
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