The Tower



An old trope that can be either physical or metaphorical in its appearance within a story. In the Tarot, The Tower is considered a sign of ill omen or adversity, but can also stand for civilization, or lone, defensive strength when regarding a specific character.

Usually, The Tower is a structure of solitude or homage to a character whose vision is farseeing and above those "bound to earth". It can also be a prison to where a main character is left to die, or a representation of a villain's Pride, as (s)he rises higher towards heaven while surrounded by their empire. See the myth of the Tower of Babel.

A character who represents the Tower is another story. They can be a tall figure, or even a dwarf with a great amount of presence. They usually have great fortitude both mental and/or physical, sometimes coming off as stubborn or gruff. They're also portrayed many a time as loners unless with others who share a similarity with him, or need him for a time. The phrase "ivory tower" ties together the connotations of isolation and pride into a concept that intellectualism or academic research make you lose touch with "real life".

In many fantasy settings, towers are usually the homes, laboratories and/or schools of magic users. This convention is probably based on Saruman's tower, Orthanc of Isengard, though some settings justify it by having mages who are also astronomers.

"The Tower" is Card XVI in the tarot deck, although mostly symbolic. In the Rider-Waite deck, it's a tower being shattered by lightning. Generally speaking, it represents a truth unearthing something not pleasant.

In fiction, The Tower may appear as:


 * Big Fancy Castle
 * The Black Tower: Tall, dark, and evil.
 * The Evil Skyscraper: The Black Tower's modern incarnation: home of the Corrupt Corporate Executive or Mega Corp in a contemporary or futuristic setting.
 * Impossibly Tall Tower: or Star Scraper, any structure whose height is beyond imagining.
 * The Ominous Megastructure: like the Tower of Babel, A gigantic, unimaginably huge "looms-over-everything" structure.
 * The Wizard's Tower: or Mage Tower usually contains telescopes, orreries, hidden artifacts, secret passages, tomes of eldritch lore, and dangerous devices Powered by a Forsaken Child in a terribly-cramped footprint.
 * The Haunted Castle: Ominous, foreboding and perched on a cliffside, accompanied by lightning and haunted by ghosts and monsters or mad scientists and their assistants.
 * The Floating Castle (Possibly Ominous): definitely important.
 * Lighthouse Point: Exactly what it says on the tin.
 * Clock Tower: often the scene of a Cathedral Climax.
 * The World Tree: The Living, Genius Loci version.

The Labyrinth or Dungeon is the inverse trope: a more expansive version of the Ominous Castle or Megastructure, with more stuff below than above. See also Big Labyrinthine Building, which may or may not be a Babel-like megastructure. Compare with Building of Adventure.

Subtropes and related tropes:
 * Big Fancy Castle
 * Clock Tower
 * Evil Tower of Ominousness
 * Evil Skyscrapers (City Noir)
 * Girl in the Tower
 * Haunted Castle
 * It's All Upstairs From Here
 * The Lighthouse might come into this.
 * Mage Tower
 * Ominous Floating Castle
 * Star Scraper: an impossibly tall tower.
 * Tower of Babel: the literal type.
 * World Tree

See also Tarot Motifs.

Anime and Manga

 * Kami's Watch Tower from Dragon Ball
 * In Battle Angel Alita, an Orbital Lift threatens to fall down due to the lost of its upper end, thus inflicting massive damage on earth. Main character Alita forms herself into a giant lotus petal which reinforces the Lift, thus preventing the apocalyptic downfall.

Literature

 * "Childe Rowland to the Dark Tower came..." is a line from an old ballad quoted in King Lear, retold in the English fairy tale "Childe Rowland", and used as the basis of a famous poem by Robert Browning.
 * Stephen King's The Eye of the Dragon has Peter imprisoned in a cell at the top of a tower for most of the second half of the book.
 * The Ministries in Nineteen Eighty-Four
 * Frankenstein, Dracula, and countless others.
 * Ulysses: The first episode of the novel is set in the Martello tower at Sandycove.
 * Throughout Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince, Professor Trelawney can be seen going around mumbling about predictions, which no one heeds- particularly about how she keeps dealing the card of 'The Lightning Struck-Tower' foretelling great danger and upheaval. Then comes the chapter by the same name, which takes place in the actual astronomy tower, the highest part of Hogwarts.

Music

 * Hatsune Miku's song, Tower of Sunz, features a tower that might or might not be symbolic.

Video Games

 * Mu's fortress from Monster Rancher,
 * The entire plot of Makai Toushi SaGa revolves around one.
 * In Hellsinker from stage 4 and onward the main characters spend the remaining of the stages to climb up the huge Cardinal Shaft.
 * How could we forget Devil May Cry 3, where the majority of the game takes place in a massive demonic tower that just bursts out the ground? In addition, the challenge levels take place in an ever ascending version of the same tower.