Topic: ARCHETYPAL CRITICISM
Name: Patel kavita
Roll No. – 11
Semester: II
Batch: 2011- 12
Submitted to:
Dept.
of English,
Bhavnagar
University,
Bhavnagar.
ARCHETYPAL CRITICISM:
An archetype differs from a prototype (even
though the two words have often been used interchangeably) in that prototype
refers primarily to a genetic and temporal pattern of relationship. In modern literary criticism archetype means
a recurring or repeating unit, normally an image, which indicates that a poet
is following a certain convention or working in a certain GENRE. For example, the PASTORAL ELEGY is a
convention, descending from ritual laments over dying gods, and hence when
Milton contributes Lycida’s to a volume of memorial poems to an acquaintance
who was drowned in the Irish Sea, the poem is written as a pastoral elegy, and
consequently employs a number of conventional images that had been used earlier
by Theocritus, Virgil, and many RENAISSANCE poets. The conventions include imagery of the solar
and seasonal cycles, in which autumn frost, the image of premature death, and
sunset in the western ocean are prominent; the idea that the subject of the
elegy was a shepherd with a recognized pastoral name and an intimate friend of
the poet; a satirical passage on the state of the church, with implied puns on
pastor and flock (naturally a post-Virgilian feature); and death and rebirth
imagery attached to the cycle of water, symbolized by the legend of Alpheus,
the river and river god that went underground in Greece and surfaced again in
Sicily in order to join the fountain and fountain nymph Arethusa.
One of the conventional images
employed in the pastoral elegy is that of the red or purple flower that is said
to have obtained its colour from the shed blood of the dying god. Lucida contains a reference to “that sanguine
flower inscribed with woe” [l. 106], the
hyacinth, thought to have obtained red markings resembling the Greek word air
(“alas”), when Hyacinthus was accidentally killed by Apollo. Milton could of course just as easily have
left out this line: the fact that he included it emphasizes the
conventionalizing element in the poem, but criticism that takes account of
archetypes is not mere “spotting” of such an image. The critical question concerns the context:
what does such an image mean by being where it is? The convention of pastoral
elegy continues past Milton to Shelley [Adonais], Arnold [The Scholar Gypsy],
and Whitman’s When Lilacs Last in Dooryard Bloom’d. Here again are many of the conventional
pastoral images, including the purple lilacs: this fact is all the more
interesting in that Whitman regarded himself as an antiarchetypal poet,
interested in new themes as more appropriate to a new world. In any case the gathering or clustering of
pastoral archetypes in his poem indicates to the critic the context within
literature that the poem belongs to.
The archetype, as a critical term, has
no Platonic associations with a form or idea that embodies itself imperfectly
in actual poems: it owes its importance to the fact that in literature
everything is new and unique from one point of view, and to the reappearance of
what has always been there, from another.
The former aspect compels the reader to focus on the distinctive context
of each particular poem; the latter indicates that it is recognizable as
literature. In other genres there are
other types of archetypes: a certain type of character, for example, may run
through all drama, like the braggart soldier, who with variations has been a
comic figure since Aristophanes’ Acharnians, the first extant comedy. The appearance of a braggart soldier in a
comedy by Shakespeare or Molière or O’Casey is quite different each time, but
the archetypal basis of the character is as essential as a skeleton is to the
performing actor. Thus the archetype is a
manifestation of the extraordinary allusiveness of literature: the fact, for
example, that all wars in literature gain poetic resonance by being associated
with the Trojan War.
In JUNGIAN CRITICISM the term archetype is used mainly to describe
certain characters and images that appear in the dreams of patients but have
their counterparts in literature, in the symbolism of alchemy, in various
religious myths. The difference between
psychological and literary treatments of archetypes is that in psychology their
central context is a private dream.
Hence they tell us nothing except that they appear, once we leave the
psychological field of dream interpretation.
The dream is not primarily a structure of communication: its meaning is
normally unknown to the dreamer. The
literary archetype, on the other hand, is first of all a unit of communication:
primitive literature, for example, is highly conventionalized, featuring
formulaic units and other indications of an effort to communicate with the
least possible obstruction. In more
complex literature the archetype tells the critic primarily that this kind of
thing has often been done before, if never quite in this way.
you have given nice description of ARCHETYPAL CRITICISM..
ReplyDelete