"Jungian archetypes" Essays and Research Papers

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    Herman Hesse- Siddhartha

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    siddhartha is extremely knowledgable and is destined to be either a great priest or a teacher. Hesse uses Joseph Campbell’s hero journey archetypes to build the frame for siddhartha by describing him to have unusual circumstances of birth‚ leaving his family to live with others‚ and spiritual apotheosis. Herman Hesse has siddhartha demonstrate the hero archetype of having an unusual circumstance birth. he is born into royalty‚in his culture. in his religion of Hinduism‚ he was born into the highest

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    Hans Christian

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    RUNNING HEAD: LITTLE MERMAID‚ ELEMENTAL ANIMA David Johnston HANS CHRISTIAN ANDERSON’S THE LITTLE MERMAID AND THE REPRESSED ELEMENTAL ANIMA INTRODUCTION According to the wisdom of Marie Louise von Franz (1973)‚ a Jungian depth-psychological study of fairy tales begins with the initial exposition of all the characters. One examines the quality‚ number and role of characters for what is missing in order to bring archetypal completeness. In this tale‚ it is the Sea-King

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    Jungian Approach Paper

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    Non-traditional Approaches to Therapy: A Jungian Approach Carl Jung The purpose of this paper is to explore the use of non-traditional forms of therapy as part of the Jungian Approach. In Jungian psychology‚ the focus is on understanding the relationship between the unconscious and the conscious. Carl Jung investigated people and believed that we are complex and have several qualities. Some of these qualities include introversion and extraversion‚ rational and irrational drives and masculinity

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    in the short story The Rocking-Horse Winner through: "the terrible mother" Hester‚ "the anti-wise man" Oscar Cresswell‚ and "the sacrificial scapegoat" Paul. Hester is portrayed as cold and shallow‚ accurately demonstrating the terrible mother archetype. Thus‚ she is a perfect example of the theme of tormented family relationships‚ present in the short story The Rocking-Horse Winner. When the authour describes what‚ "Everyone else said of her: ’She is such a good mother. She adores her children

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    Not My Best Side

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    “Explain how the poem “not my best side” portrayal of its characters‚ leads to archetypes being gone against.” This poem is inter-textual in a sense that it is based on the painting “St. George and the Dragon”. It takes a humorous role in portraying each of the characters found in the painting and goes against theirs common archetypes of a dragon‚ princess and knight. This poem is a parody on the archetypes that the characters of the painting should have‚ it goes against them completely in a humorous

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    World lit - blood wedding

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    succumbed by social stereotypes? In Frederico Garcia Lorca’s tragic play‚ Blood Wedding‚ he uses many literary strategies in order to maintain various social stereotypes. Three main techniques the author chooses to incorporate include atmosphere‚ archetypes‚ and resolution to further his critique of the social stereotype present in this spanish society. To begin‚ Frederico Garcia Lorca uses atmosphere constantly throughout the play. Lorca aimed to create a brooding atmosphere of early 1900’s Spain

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    Brutus: Archetypal Hero

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    Brutus: Rise of the Tragic Hero William Shakespeare‚ in his play‚ Julius Caesar‚ displays Brutus as the archetypal hero and uses the supporting characters as surrounding archetypes. He supports this by relating Brutus’s characteristics to the traditional hero’s personality‚ its history‚ and by creating connections between the evens surrounding and including Brutus to the heroic journey. Shakespeare’s purpose is to create dynamic and relatable characters in order for others to enjoy his play thoroughly

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    Thor as an Archetypal Hero

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    characters that are similar in nature‚ and these characters became known as archetypes. There are many famous archetypes‚ but perhaps the most famous archetype is the hero. A hero is defined as a protagonist who goes on a quest or a journey to bring about greater good to the universe (Campbell). According to the great American mythologist Joseph Campbell‚ the hero must meet nine criteria in order to be considered an archetype. In addition to these nine criteria‚ the hero must also experience twelve

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    Consumer Psychology

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    and “...how consumers use brands as props or anthropomorphic actors in stories they report about themselves and others. Such drama enactments enable these storytellers to experience powerful myths that reflect psychological archetypes.” (Miller‚Suresh‚Woodside). These archetypes speak to most primitive part of the consumer psyche‚ in a visceral way. The

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    Archetypes A common theme in both Into the Wild and Everything is Illuminated is an archetype of this Eden a final destination of journey. For “Alex‚” it was his Alaska‚ for Alex‚ Jonathan‚ and Alex’s Grandfather it was Trachimbrod. An Eden in literature is a final destination or state that a character‚ or set of characters in the case of Everything is Illuminated‚ strives to achieve or find. Both books have the characters searching for their Eden’s for their own personal reasons. “Alex” takes

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