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archetype
(redirected from archetypical)

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archetype

Typical or perfect specimen of its kind. In the psychology of Carl Jung, it refers to one of the basic roles or situations, received from the collective unconscious, in which people tend to cast themselves – such as the Hero, the Terrible Mother (stepmother, witch); death, and rebirth. Archetypes are recurring motifs in myth, art, and literature.

The figure of the Wanderer condemned to roam the earth until released from a curse appears in the Greek legend of Odysseus, in the story of the Wandering Jew (told throughout Europe from the 16th century on), and in the hero of Richard Wagner's opera The Flying Dutchman.



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Yet Ellison's chiastic inversion, through Tod Clifton, of the conventional white puppeteer/black puppet relationship proves that such archetypical roles are overly simplistic and, moreover, ripe for revision: Tod Clifton, the puppet master, is black, and his "'darky' entertainer [puppet] is white.
This recognition process seems unrelated to the potential of the stimulus to elicit subjective arousal, because femaleoriented sexual slides produced no effects, and recognition could depend on the presence of simple archetypical features such as genitals or breasts, because these features were more present in the male-oriented sexual pictures.
Spero has long been dedicated to the frieze--with its linear, episodic, narrative structure, suggestive of processional dances and turning pages--and to archaic representations of the female figure, which she recasts as archetypical Everywomen.
 
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