THE ARCHETYPES OF LITERATURE
Northrop Frye
(Abridged)
Importance
of archetypes
Literary
criticism should have the “methodological discipline and coherence" of
science. We can attain these only through total consistency in criticism. The
primary source of consistency in criticism is the "recurrence of certain
archetypes in the literature of all periods and cultures.”
Criticism as a science
The criticism we find in journals and scholarly monographs has every quality of science. "Prosody is scientific in structure, so is phonetics, (and) so is philology". And yet, in studying this type of critical science, the student may feel like moving away from literature.
Meaningless
criticism
At
present most of the central area of criticism is commentary. But the
commentators are not within any scientific discipline. They are engaged
in brightening the corner where they are. Our
first step, says Frye, is to recognize and avoid meaningless criticism.
The structural analysis of literary work
We aim to keep the study of
literature centripetal, asserts Frye. The structural
analysis of the literary work must be the basis. The texture of any
work of art is complex, and for explaining it, we may seek the help of history
or philosophy. But, we must never forget the subject of study. "If we
forget it, we may find that in our anxiety to write about literature, we have
forgotten how to read it".
Systematic criticism—not an anachronism
Frye points out that it takes a long time
for a science to discover that it is an independent discipline. Prior to that,
it remains “an embryo” within the body of some other subject. Physics and
astronomy assumed modern forms in the Renaissance, "chemistry in the
eighteenth century, biology in the nineteenth and the social sciences in the
twentieth.” If systematic criticism develops in the modern age, it is not an
anachronism.
Classifying principles
Frye speaks about the classifying
principles intervening between the two points:
i. The preliminary effort of criticism, the
structural analysis of the work. ii. The assumption that there is such a
subject as criticism and that it makes complete sense.
“We may proceed inductively from
structural analysis trying to see larger patterns in them, or we may
proceed deductively, with the consequences that follow from
postulating the unity of criticism”.
Inductive study
The unity of a work of art is the basis for
structural analysis. This unity is not "produced solely by the
unconditional will of the artist".
- Poems like poets are born and not made. The task (of
the poet) is to deliver it in "as uninjured a state as
possible".
- A poem if alive is "equally anxious to get rid
of the poet".
- The "critic takes over where the poet
leaves". Criticism survives by connecting "the psychology of the
poem" with the poet.
- Every poet has his private mythology—his unique
formation symbols.
Search for archetype as literary
anthropology
The search for archetypes is a mode of
literary anthropology. We find archetypes reappearing in the classics. The
classics revert to them. The great masterpieces take us to a point
where we can see an “enormous number of converging patterns of significance”.
Inductive
movement with an example from Hamlet
The inductive movement towards the
archetype is a process of backing up, as we back up from a painting if we want
to see composition instead of brushwork. Frye quotes an example from Hamlet.
In the
foreground, we see the intricate verbal structure—the puns of the first clown.
One step back, we are in the Wilson Knight and Spurgeon group of critics,
listening to the steady rain of images of corruption and decay. One more step
back, we see the psychological relationships that were the main interest of
Bradley. If we take yet another step back, we are in the Stoll and Shaw group and
see the scene as part of a conventional drama. If we further step back, we can
see the archetypes of the scene—the hero’s ‘Liebestod’ (a German word that
means the convergence of love and death). Thus the literary anthropologist who
chases the source of the Hamlet legend from the pre-Shakespeare play to Saxo
and from Saxo to nature myths is not running away from Shakespeare. He is
drawing closer to the archetypal form which Shakespeare has recreated.
Deductive
Study
· Some
arts move in time like music; others in space, like painting. "Organizing principle" in both is
"recurrence".
· Literature
seems to be intermediate between music and painting. The words form rhythms
that approach a musical sequence of sounds. The words create pictorial images.
· "The
rhythm of literature is narrative, the simultaneous grasp of the verbal
structure and the meaning or significance.
Rhythm and Ritual
Rhythm is a
recurrent movement founded on the natural cycle. Everything in nature grows out
of a "profound synchronization between an organism and the rhythms"
of its environment. With animals, some "expressions of
synchronization," such as the mating dance of birds, could almost be
called rituals. But in human life, ritual seems a voluntary effort to recapture
a lost rapport with nature.
We must also
notice the tendency of rituals to become encyclopedic. All the recurrences in
nature, the day, the phases of the moon, and the seasons get "rituals
attached" to them.
Myth as
archetype
The myth is the
"central informing power that gives archetypal significance" to the ritual
and "archetypal narrative" to the oracle. Hence myth is the
archetype. The crucial importance of myth has been “forced on”
literary critics by Jung and Frazer.
But, Frye feels that the several books available on it are not always
systematic in their approach. Therefore,
he provides a table of the different phases.
Phases |
Myths |
Archetype |
The dawn, spring and birth. |
The
birth of the hero, revival and resurrection, —winter
and death.
|
Romance
and most dithyrambic and rhapsodic poetry.
|
The
zenith, summer, and marriage or triumph. |
The
sacred marriage, and entering paradise. |
Comedy,
pastoral and idyll. |
The
sunset, autumn and death. |
Fall,
the dying god, violent death and sacrifice. |
Tragedy and elegy. |
The darkness, winter and dissolution. |
The
flood and the return of chaos. The defeat of the hero.
|
Satire |
The quest myth
The quest (of the hero) assimilates
oracular and random verbal structures to become the central myth. In higher
religions, the quest myth, as the Messiah myth becomes the narrative structure
of the oracles of Judaism. A comprehensive view of the subject takes us from
archetypes to genres.
- The drama, as a genre, emerges from the ritual side
of myth.
- The lyrics originate from the epiphanic or
fragmented side, and
- The epic carries on the central encyclopedic
structure.
Frye concludes with the second table of
contents, in which he attempts to set forth the central pattern of the comic
and tragic visions.
The comic vision |
The tragic vision
|
The
human world is a community—the hero represents the wish-fulfilment of the
reader. The archetype of images of symposium, communion, order, friendship
and love. Marriage
or some equivalent consummation. |
In
the tragic vision the human world is a tyranny or anarchy. The
isolated man is the leader with his back to his followers. A bullying giant/
betrayed hero. The
harlot, the witch and other varieties of Jung's 'terrible mother'. |
The
animal world is a community of domesticated animals—a flock of sheep or lamb,
or one of the gentler birds, usually a dove. The archetype of pastoral
images. |
Beasts
of prey, wolves, vulture, serpents, dragons and the like. |
The
vegetable world is a garden, grove or park or a tree of life or a rose or
lotus. |
It
is a sinister forest, or a heath or wilderness, or a tree of death. |
The
mineral world is a city, or one building or a temple. The archetype of
geometrical images, ‘the starlit dome’ |
The
mineral word is seen in terms of deserts, rocks, and ruins, or of sinister
geometrical images like the cross. |
The
unformed world is a river, traditionally fourfold—the Renaissance image of
the temperate body with its four humours. |
The
world usually the sea—the flood myth. combination of the sea and beast gives
the leviathan and similar water-monsters |
Frye
admits that the tables are not only "elementary” but also "grossly
over-simplified." He says that there are deficiencies in inductive and
deductive studies but hopes these will meet in the middle "somewhere and
somehow". A "systematic and comprehensive development of
criticism" will be possible when they meet.
[1394]
Dr S. Sreekumar
Disclaimer
All the essays in this blog are for the undergraduate and postgraduate students of Indian Universities. They do not substitute the originals.
The students must necessarily go through the original texts.
The writer hopes to help the students from the underdeveloped areas of our country.
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