Archetype: Difference between revisions

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{{trope}}
{{Useful Notes}}
An archetype is a universal theme, story or character which is so fundamental that, regardless of how many times it is used (or misused), it never becomes stale, dated or cliché. This is the opposite of [[Discredited Trope|discredited tropes]], which started out as good ideas but were used so often they became cliché. A "pure" archetype is always a partial personality, rather than a rounded character. In fiction or life, an excessively archetypal character is likely to come across as two-dimensional, if not ''one-''dimensional. (And in real life, they may be mentally ill!)
An '''archetype''' is a universal theme, story or character which is so fundamental that, regardless of how many times it is used (or misused), it never becomes stale, dated or cliché. This is the opposite of [[Discredited Trope|discredited tropes]], which started out as good ideas but were used so often they became cliché. A "pure" archetype is always a partial personality, rather than a rounded character. In fiction or life, an excessively archetypal character is likely to come across as two-dimensional, if not ''one-''dimensional. (And in real life, they may be mentally ill!)


For example, ''[[Star Wars]]'' was purposefully built upon [[Archetypal Character|Archetypal Characters]], to which it owes its longevity. The entire story hinges upon [[Hero's Journey]], which is an [[Archetypal Story]].
For example, ''[[Star Wars]]'' was purposefully built upon [[Archetypal Character]]s, to which it owes its longevity. The entire story hinges upon [[Hero's Journey]], which is an [[Archetypal Story]].
* Luke Skywalker ([[The Hero]], [[Heroic Archetype]])
* Luke Skywalker ([[The Hero]], [[Heroic Archetype]])
* Obi-Wan Kenobi and Yoda ([[The Obi-Wan]], [[Mentor Archetype]])
* Obi-Wan Kenobi and Yoda ([[The Obi-Wan]], [[Mentor Archetype]])

Latest revision as of 20:05, 1 August 2019


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    An archetype is a universal theme, story or character which is so fundamental that, regardless of how many times it is used (or misused), it never becomes stale, dated or cliché. This is the opposite of discredited tropes, which started out as good ideas but were used so often they became cliché. A "pure" archetype is always a partial personality, rather than a rounded character. In fiction or life, an excessively archetypal character is likely to come across as two-dimensional, if not one-dimensional. (And in real life, they may be mentally ill!)

    For example, Star Wars was purposefully built upon Archetypal Characters, to which it owes its longevity. The entire story hinges upon Hero's Journey, which is an Archetypal Story.


    An interesting point is that many Tropes could easily be considered archetypes in and of themselves.