Title: The Trickster Archetype
1The Trickster Archetype
The figure of the tricksterHe is a forerunner
of the saviour, and, like him, God, man, and
animal at once. He is both subhuman and
superhuman, a bestial and divine being whose
chief and most alarming characteristic is his
unconsciousness. - Carl Gustav Jung,
from The Archetypes and the Collective Unconscious
2The trickster archetype
- Seeking to define the Trickster is a treacherous
task. He is a slippery figure who shifts shape,
challenging authority and disrupting order. -
- The Trickster is a seer of limited sight- part
human and part supernatural. His prophecies are
often riddled with half-truths and lies,
falsities that somehow point toward a higher
truth. - The Trickster possesses the keen ability to see
these hidden meanings and uses these insights to
transform himself or to act as a catalyst in the
changing of others.
3The trickster archetype
But the Tricksters schemes or tricks can often
be self-defeating and harmful to other
individuals. Although he is partially divine and
mortal, the Trickster is also sub-human. Due
to his oracular insights and his sub-human state,
he is often the alienated outsider.
Functioning on the fringes of society, the
Trickster works his strange medicine to challenge
taboos and crumble the structures of
civilization.
The Outsider by Thomas Homer
4The trickster archetype
Though the Trickster resists typical
classification, he is there forever blurring
realities in order to reshape the world. If
you try to follow his trail, like Carrolls Alice
down the rabbit hole, you may find yourself lost
and bewildered. But the discoveries you make on
your winding roads will make the journey worth
the effort.
5The trickster archetype
- In short, the trickster is a boundary crosser.
Every group has its edge, its sense of in and
out, and trickster is always thereHe also
attends the internal boundaries by which groups
articulate their social life. We constantly
distinguish right and wrong, sacred and
profane, clean and dirty, male and female, young
and old, living and dead and in every case
trickster will cross the line and confuse the
distinction. Trickster is the creative idiot,
therefore, the wise fool, the gray-haired baby,
the cross-dresser, the speaker of sacred
profanitiesTrickster is the mythic embodiment of
ambiguity and ambivalence, doubleness and
duplicity, contradiction and paradox.
(Hyde 7)
6The Trickster archetype
- A curious combination of typical trickster
motifsinclude his fondness for sly jokes and
malicious pranks, his powers as a shape-shifter,
his dual nature, half animal, half divine, his
exposure to all kinds of tortures, and last but
not least his approximation to the figure of a
saviour. - (Jung 255)
7Multi-Cultural Examples of Tricksters
- African American folklore
- the Hare
- French folktales the Fox
- Native American mythology
- the Crow and the Coyote
- Western African folklore
- Anansi the Spider
- East Indian/Asian myths
- The Monkey
- Greek/Roman
- mythology
- Hermes/Mercury
- Norse mythology
- Loki
8- When exploring possible literary representations
of the Trickster, keep an eye out for characters
who use their wits instead of brute strength to
survive and/or live on the edges of society and
possess oracular vision. These characters will
usually bring about some form of significant
transformation/reformation within themselves,
within others, or cause some form of change in
their surroundings. These transformations that
the Trickster catalyzes usually will involve some
form of inversion of societal norms or the
blurring of cultural/situational/temporal
boundaries. The Trickster is also routinely a
salvific figure capable of bringing redemption
through his or her unusual methodologies.
9Modern reverberations of the trickster
Not quite as ubiquitous as the Shadow, the
Trickster figure still rears its head frequently
in our modern culture - bringing strange changes
in his wake.
10Charlie Chaplins The Tramp
- The Tramp is a bumbling but good-natured
character created and portrayed by Charlie
Chaplin, a well-known silent movie star. This
vagrant character strains to behave and radiate
the dignity of a gentleman, but he instead fouls
up unintentionally. The Tramp habitually uses
his cunning to reach his goals and to escape
looming authority figures who are intolerant of
his antics. Chaplin, as the Tramp, also
continually uses familiar aspects of his
surroundings in unfamiliar and novel ways.
Whether using wooden chairs as armor or potatoes
as synchronized dancing feet, the Tramp takes the
traditional and utilizes it untraditionally to
create something new.
11Brer Rabbit and Bugs Bunny
- Brer Rabbit is a reccurring character from
African American folktales who uses his wits and
trickery to outsmart Brer Fox and Brer Bear.
Originally a Cherokee Trickster, Brer Rabbit was
appropriated into the African American oral
tradition. - A more contemporary rabbit, Bugs Bunny, also
continually eludes his tormentors through foolish
deceptions, myriad disguises, and verbal
trickery. Both of these rascally rabbits
highly exemplify the wily nature of the
Trickster.
12The roadrunner and wile E. coyote
- Both Wile E. Coyote and the Roadrunner could be
considered Trickster figures. Whether
constructing or evading various elaborate traps
and tricks, both the Roadrunner and the Coyote
are forever locked in a tricksterish dance each
striving to use his wits to finally emerge
victorious. Though he struggles to use his
cunning to defeat the Roadrunner, Wile E. Coyote
is continually foiled by fate and his opponents
speed.
13Bart Simpson as a trickster
- Bart, from The Simpsons, is an untraditional
Trickster. Through his various pranks, schemes,
and adventures, this rabble rouser continually
causes his own demise and often accidentally
brings about positive change in the lives of
others. - Behind the thin veil of existential apathy and
disruption, Bart possesses true integrity despite
his extreme selfishness and delusions of
grandeur.
14Frank the Rabbit from Donnie Darko
- In the existential teenage drama Donnie Darko, a
giant rabbit from the recent future named Frank
appears to the protagonist with advice on how to
avert the impending destruction of the town. - With Franks help, Donnie is able to perform a
sacrificial action that saves the lives of those
he loves. - But Frank is not a typical savior his cryptic
advice is eerie and confusing and our hero is
unsure if Franks visits are merely a troubling
side effect of his anti-depressant medication.
For these reasons, Frank is a haunting Trickster
figure stepping in to bring about change.
15Major resources
- Hyde, Lewis. Trickster Makes This World
Mischief, Myth, and Art. New York North Point
Press, 1998. Print. - Jung, C. G. The Archetypes and the Collective
Unconscious. 2nd ed. New York Princeton
University Press, 1959. Print. -