Category Archives: Journal

Power

Silver Mushrooms, Lummi Island, WA. Photo by Scarlett Messenger
Silver Mushrooms, Lummi Island, WA. Photo by Scarlett Messenger

Power

Joseph Campbell discusses the hero as having achieved a freedom to live through conquering his fear of death as well as a mastery over both the inner and outer worlds as being the hero’s ultimate reward. This power of abstract inner peace does seem to be the next evolutionary step in the hero’s spiritual and personal growth, but the heroine has other dragons to slay before she can reach that point. Liberation of the soul can not occur until the body is free. Historically speaking, many of our fairy tales were written and passed down at a time when women were still restricted by a lack of agency over their own destinies, and even today the ability to govern her own body and sexuality is questioned under intense public scrutiny. In reading these stories, it has become clear that the heroine’s journey is less about confronting inner demons or defeating grand philosophical concepts in the guise of hoary beasties. The heroine is tilting at the unconquerable windmills of the straitjacket of ever-changing and onerous demands society places on her.

In the films drawn from the comic book series The X Men, there is a character named Jean Grey. Jean is a telepath with impressive powers that she is terrified to use to their full potential, and throughout the film series she is shown to be mostly the protégé of fellow telepath and leader of the X Men Professor Charles Xavier and as fodder for a rather weak love triangle between her boyfrien Cyclops, and the main hero, Wolverine. By the third film, she loses control of this power and goes on a murderous and apocalyptic rampage. As I watched this unfold on the screen during my third date with my now-husband, I was thoroughly confused. I knew he was a fan of the X Men comics, so I decided to ask him for clarification as we left the theater. He explained that Jean was being controlled by an outside entity called “Phoenix Force”, and that it embodied the primal powers of creation. It was her inability to control this raw power that lead to her attempting to annihilate the universe. He also mentioned that in the comics, it was clear that Jean was a far more powerful telepath than Professor Xavier, but that she couldn’t handle that much power and so he had to use his powers to block some of her’s. I remember thinking at the time how twisted the whole concept felt, from the “women can’t be trusted with their own power” aspect to the fact that even though she was more gifted than he was, Jean was forever dependent on a man to keep her safe from herself. Not unlike watching predominantly male politicians debating matters of birth control, rape, and abortion in the public arena, the murky hand of the patriarchy hovers over her “for her own good”.

In one of the few examples of a male hero being burdened with a gift that must be suppressed to this extent, The Incredible Hulk is charged with policing his own rage, rather than having someone other than himself keep him in check. Bruce Banner is trusted with his own power, and when we see him lose control and “hulk out”, it is to battle an enemy or defend the weak. Jean Grey is shown as being indiscriminate in her actions, killing people who love her or care about her and setting out to destroy the world because of her own internal pain. Her weakness in the face of her power blurs the lines of her morality. She becomes evil and witch-like by default. The fact that this fear of the “witch” is still as much with us today as it was in the time the Grimm Brother were collecting their stories shows how important the heroine’s journey continues to be as an archetype. Walking the path of self-salvation is her only hope of controlling of her fate, but it is ability her control of fate that the world fears. Unlike Campbell’s hero who’s ultimate boon is the ability to cross the threshold between worlds at will, only women have the literal ability to grant admittance for others to cross that threshold through procreation. This is what makes the heroine something to regulate, to keep in check. Characters such as Jean Grey are blatantly expressions of society’s fear that one day woman will go rogue and become The Destroyer of Worlds, transforming from Shakti to Kali. If all the world’s women decided to stop procreating to pursue their heroic calling, our species would come to and end in one generation.

Heroines like Jean Grey who are tormented for their power are not rare, especially in comic books culture. In her informal study of superheroines, “Women in Refrigerators”, Gail Simone exposes the hypocrisy with which we treat the heroine in our culture. The name comes from a scene in a Green Lantern comic in which the hero comes home to find one of his foes has murdered his girlfriend and stuffed her body into the refrigerator. Time and time again, we see the heroine virtually raped or stripped of her powers. This is usually done in an exploitative fashion, or to emphasize the impact of such an act on the hero, rather than the women it happens to. She is a tragic device, not a person. Conversely, this phenomenon of the symbolic raping of the heroine as plot device was handled much more deftly in Disney’s Maleficent, where we are given a rare and humanized glimpse into the effect this theft of power has on the heroine. The main character, Maleficent, is a very powerful fairy and a warrior queen, who’s enormous black wings give her the ability to soar over the battlefield like a Valkyrie. A man, who she believes loves her, drugs her and cuts off her wings in order to become king. The scene where she wakes up and discovers what has happened is beyond devastating. He has literally stolen her power and built his own kingdom with it. Her lust for vengeance is palpable and understandable. Time and time again, we see that the origin story of the heroine is surprisingly based in her first becoming a victim, usually physically. She is raped, beaten, or abused, therefore she must seek revenge or liberate herself. We like the idea of a heroic, empowered woman following her path, but we are going to make her suffer for it.

What is the heroine’s journey? The answer is not a simple one. For each heroine there are differences. The challenges change, events happen out of sequence, even the outcomes change from story to story. Ultimately, it is a journey of empowerment and liberation. Our fairy tales are a cry for freedom. Freedom from drudgery and dependency. Freedom from society’s unrealistic demands and expectations. Freedom to access our power and achieve our goals. They are the adventures we were never allowed to have and continue to struggle for. The heroine may or may not seek out her quest, but she does not dodge it when it arrives. In spite of what we have been lead to believe, the heroine’s passivity is not an indication of weakness, but rather an inner strength and fortitude. In the end, if she is steadfast and true, she will win autonomy over her destiny and freedom to decide for herself what her next adventure should be.

References

A., & Neumann, E. (1956). Amor and Psyche; the psychic development of the feminine; a commentary on the tale by Apuleius. New York: Pantheon Books.

Asbjørnsen, P. C., Moe, J. E., Dasent, G. W., & Stobbs, W. (1969). Popular tales from the Norse. London: Bodley Head.

The Avengers [Motion picture]. (2012). Milano: Walt Disney studios home entertainment.

Baum, L. F., & Neill, J. R. (1993). The emerald city of Oz. New York: Morrow.

Baum, L. F., Denslow, W. W., & Hearn, M. P. (2000). The annotated Wizard of Oz: The wonderful Wizard of Oz. New York: Norton.

Bettelheim, B. (1976). The uses of enchantment: The meaning and importance of fairy tales. New York: Knopf.

Bornstein, D., & Davis, S. (2010). Social entrepreneurship: What everyone needs to know. New York: Oxford University Press.

Bottigheimer, R. (2000). Fertility Control and the Birth of the Modern European Fairy-Tale Heroine. Marvels & Tales, 14(1), 64-79.

Cameron, J. (Director). (1986). Aliens [Motion picture on DVD]. Twentieth century fox home entertainment.

Campbell, J., & Kudler, D. (2004). Pathways to bliss: Mythology and personal transformation. Novato, CA: New World Library.

Campbell, J. (1972). The hero with a thousand faces. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.

Carroll, L., Carroll, L., Gardner, M., & Tenniel, J. (1960). The annotated Alice: Alice’s adventures in Wonderland & Through the looking glass. New York: C.N. Potter.

Cocteau, J. (Director). (1946). La Belle et la bête [Motion picture]. Studio Canal.

Demme, J. (Director). (1990). The Silence of the Lambs [Motion picture on DVD]. Orion Pictures Corp.

Dundes, L. (2001). Disney’s modern heroine Pocahontas: Revealing age-old gender stereotypes and role discontinuity under a façade of liberation. The Social Science Journal, 38(3), 353-365.

Estés, C. P. (1992). Women who run with the wolves: Myths and stories of the wild woman archetype. New York: Ballantine Books.

Fields, D. L. (2014). Rhymes with ‘Bitch ’: The Real Heroine of Fairy Tales. EHumanista, 26, 264-286.

Gans, C. (Director). (2006). Silent Hill [Motion picture on DVD]. TriStar Pictures.

Gessner, N. (Director). (1976). The Little Girl Who Lives Down the Lane [Motion picture on DVD]. Carnelian Productions.

Gilliam, T. (Director). (2005). Tideland [Motion picture on DVD]. Canada Saskatchewan Production Studios.

Grimm, J., Grimm, W., & Tatar, M. (2004). The annotated Brothers Grimm. New York: W.W. Norton.

Henson, J. (Director). (1986). Labyrinth [Motion picture on DVD]. Henson Associates/Lucasfilm.

Hooper, T. (Director). (1982). Poltergeist [Motion picture on DVD]. Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer.

Jordan, N. (Director), & Carter, A. (Writer). (1985). The Company of Wolves [Motion picture on DVD]. ITC/Palace.

Kimball, M. (1999). From Folktales to Fiction: Orphan Characters in Children’s Literature. Library Trends, Winter, 558-578.

Larsen, S., & Larsen, R. (1991). A fire in the mind: The life of Joseph Campbell. New York: Doubleday.

Lewis, C. S., & Baynes, P. (1956). The last battle. New York: Macmillan.

Lindsay, R. (2012). Menstruation as Heroine’s Journey in Pan’s Labyrinth. Journal of Religion & Film, 16(1), 1-27.

Lucas, G. (Director). (1977). Star Wars [Motion picture on DVD]. Twentieth-Century Fox Corp.

Marshall, N. (Director). (2006). The Descent [Motion picture on DVD]. Celador Films.

McKean, D. (Director). (2006). MirrorMask [Motion picture on DVD]. Sony Pictures Home Entertainment.

Murdock, M. (1990). The heroine’s journey. Boston, MA: Shambhala.

Murdock, M. (n.d.). Meet Maureen Murdock. Retrieved October 29, 2015, from http://www.maureenmurdock.com/meetmaureen.html

Palumbo, D. (2008). The Monomyth in James Cameron’s The Terminator: Sarah as Monomythic Heroine. J Popular Culture The Journal of Popular Culture, 41(3), 413-427.

Pennell, H., & Behm-Morawitz, E. (2015). The Empowering (Super) Heroine? The Effects of Sexualized Female Characters in Superhero Films on Women. Sex Roles, 72(5-6), 211-220.

Pinkola Estés, C. (n.d.). Biography. Retrieved October 30, 2015, from http://www.clarissapinkolaestes.com/index.htm

Pinterest. (n.d.). Retrieved from https://www.pinterest.com/

Ragan, K. (1998). Fearless girls, wise women, and beloved sisters: Heroines in folktales from around the world. New York: W.W. Norton.

Rankin, A., & Bass, J. (Directors). (1982). The Last Unicorn [Motion picture on DVD]. Sunn Classic.

Ratner, B. (Director), Shuler-Donner, L. (Producer), & Kinberg, S. (Writer). (2006). X-Men, the last stand [Motion picture]. United States: 20th Century Fox.

Rowling, J. K. (1998). Harry Potter and the sorcerer’s stone. Scholastic.

Scott, R. (Director). (1979). Alien [Motion picture on DVD]. Twentieth-Century Fox.

Scott, R. (Director). (1985). Legend [Motion picture on DVD]. Embassy International Pictures.

Scott, T. (Director). (1983). The Hunger [Motion picture on DVD]. MGM/UA Entertainment Co.

Selick, H. (Director), & Gaiman, N. (Writer). (2009). Coraline [Motion picture on DVD]. Focus Features.

Simone, G. (1999, March). Women in Refrigerators. Retrieved from http://lby3.com/wir/

Singh, T. (Director). (2000). The Cell [Motion picture on DVD]. New Line Cinema.

Smith, K. (Director). (1999). Dogma [Motion picture on DVD]. Cinema Club.

Stromberg, R. (Director). (2014). Maleficent [Motion picture on DVD]. Walt Disney Pictures.

Stuller, J. K. (2010). Ink-stained amazons and cinematic warriors: Superwomen in modern mythology. London: I.B. Tauris &.

Tatar, M. (1987). The hard facts of the Grimms’ fairy tales. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.

Tatar, M. (2004). Secrets beyond the door: The story of Bluebeard and his wives. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.

Toosi, M. (2002). A century of change: The U.S. labor force, 1950–2050. Monthly Labor Review, May, 15-28.

Toro, G. D. (Director). (2006). Pan’s Labyrinth [Motion picture on DVD]. Picturehouse.

Wachowski, A. (Director), & Wachowski, L. (Writer). (2005). V for Vendetta [Motion picture]. Warner Bros.

Williams, C. (2010). Who’s Wicked Now? The Stepmother as Fairy-Tale Heroine. Marvels & Tales, 24(2), 255-271.

Winter, K. (n.d.). Girls Underground. Retrieved from http://girls-underground.com/

Zipes, J. (1983). The trials and tribulations of Little Red Riding Hood: Versions of the tale in sociocultural context. South Hadley, MA: Bergin & Garvey.

The Challenges of Research

Not Gingerbread, Lummi Island, WA. Photo by Scarlett Messenger
Not Gingerbread, Lummi Island, WA. Photo by Scarlett Messenger

The Challenges of Research

I feel like this week I need to address something other than the reading. As important as the reading was (and I may write an extra journal entry about it this week if the holiday permits) the lack of resources or the nature of the resources I found while researching this course has been revealing and disheartening. Trying to supplement my reading with articles and books on the subject of heroines has repeatedly ended in failure. At first, I thought my lack of progress was due to a fault in my research skills. Perhaps I just hadn’t found the right incantation to feed Google. The vast majority of links I found pertained to the drug heroin and heroin addiction, in spite of the fact that the words aren’t even spelled alike These are actual results I came across before I could find anything remotely related to my subject matter:

10 Disney Heroines Chosen To Be “Doctor Who” Companions

Show Your Love For DC Comics Heroines With These Dreamy 1940s Pin-Ups!

Which Heroine Should You Cosplay For Comic Con?

And so on. I even found a recipe for “Heroin Chicken Tenders” before I found anything about female heroes. I tried every outlet I could find. One of my personal favorite online indulgences, Pinterest, only gave me hypersexualized images of Disney princesses and superheroines that other women were sharing back and forth while gushing about how much they wished they looked like Tinkerbell or Wonder Woman. One of the few people online who is dedicated to studying the heroine is a writer named Kate Winter, whose Girls Underground website was part of the inspiration for this course. She is specifically focused on heroines who delve into the underworld, and her site was a great resource for materials for this course. Outside of that… the internet is fairly dark on the subject.


The quality of video I usually find when searching for “superheroines” on YouTube.

Searching for books on the subject proved even more challenging. I would have liked to have explored some non-Jungian angles to this concept, but the discussion on the matter is completely obscured by the androcentric precedent set by Campbell. We can’t even discuss the heroine on her own terms, we can only discuss her through the scrim of the male, which means she constantly has to be compared and contrasted with his motivations and actions in order for us to even recognize her as a heroine. Even academic journals presented little that applied to my field of study, and again came up with mostly drug abuse articles. It seems that in our culture, the image of the heroine is overshadowed by the image of woman as object, to the point where we are more likely to discuss the drugs women are addicted to rather than acknowledge they themselves might be capable of anything heroic.

I have no real resolution for this. Other than just stating the obvious need for more scholarship into this area, society itself must change in order for the heroine to emerge as a full-formed and independent entity. Media representations must transcend the “man with breasts” or “objectified but it’s ok because she can fight” models we are currently presented with. We need to learn to broaden our concept of what makes a hero a hero and how that is different from the heroine. Currently, I have reached my maximum level of irritation at the complete lack of recognition of heroines, both fictional and real. I will leave you with some of the search results I got when I searched for the term “hero” for comparison. The depth of the problem becomes obvious after only a few clicks:

The Last, Disposable Action Hero

3 Ways to Let Your Man Know that He’s the Real Hero”

Tintin: A very European hero”

Campbell, J. (1972). The hero with a thousand faces. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.

Murdock, M. (1990). The heroine’s journey. Boston, MA: Shambhala.

Estés, C. P. (1992). Women who run with the wolves: Myths and stories of the wild woman archetype. New York: Ballantine Books.

Winter, K. (n.d.). Girls Underground. Retrieved from http://girls-underground.com/

Rankin, A., & Bass, J. (Directors). (1982). The Last Unicorn [Motion picture on DVD]. Sunn Classic.

Pinterest. (n.d.). Retrieved from https://www.pinterest.com/

Beauty and the Bodhisattva

Heart, Whitehorn Reserve, WA. Photo by Scarlett Messenger
Heart, Whitehorn Reserve, WA. Photo by Scarlett Messenger

Beauty and the Bodhisattva

Heroines are, by their very nature, oddities. While often times they are described as possessing the qualities that their society values most in a woman (modesty, beauty, obedience, etc.), they must have certain unexpected traits that most people lack in order to become heroines in the first place. It is their ability to rise to the occasion, whether through extreme patience, intelligence, endurance, or skill, that makes them the heroine. This is liable to make anyone unusual in their world. The heroine is often described as an exile, either living in a remote location, an orphan, or shunned by those around her. Rapunzel’s complete isolation would make a lesser woman go mad. Cinderella and Snow White are orphans who have had their ties to the outside world severed in a cruel and murderous world. Hermione Granger from the Harry Potter series is of mixed heritage, a “mudblood” wizard whose parents are “muggles”, or non-wizards. In the Norwegian folktale “Tatterhood”, we meet a heroine who is described as ugly and ill-behaved who rides a goat and brandishes a wooden spoon. She is so hideous her own mother insists on having a “do-over” child. Yet at the end of the tale it is revealed that she has chosen this life of perpetual rejection in order to ward off those unworthy of her. This physical and psychological isolation is necessary to the heroine’s quest. Solitude prepares her for the trials ahead, and often makes her uniquely capable of meeting these challenges and succeeding. She has known pain, loss, and fear before. They will not surprise her the second time around.

It is perhaps because of the rejection (or ejection) of the heroine by society that she becomes the heroine. Is this heroic nature innate or something she develops through the quest? In this week’s film. Jean Cocteau’s La belle et la bête, we see Belle taunted and abused by her family for her gentle and generous heart. Her sisters are shallow and cruel, the men of her family are brutish, and only her cowardly father seems to value her. When the Beast demands her father send one of his daughters to live in his castle, only she is willing to sacrifice herself. Her life as an outcast within her family has most likely given her a sense of nothing to lose as much as it has given her a sense of duty. However, even Belle’s kind nature is challenged by the Beast. At first she is repulsed by him, but by the end of the story she is in love, her kind heart having won out. Perhaps the answer to the question of nature vs nurture for the heroine is that it is both that make her what she is. Were she not born to be the heroine, Belle would not have survived the trials, or even began them. At the same time, she had to choose to become the heroine. She had to answer the call, and she had to choose to act heroically when asked to do so. She had all the tools she needed at her disposal, but how she used them was entirely her own decision. She could have slayed the Beast, or allowed him to die. She could have relented and married him upon arrival and would probably never have fallen in love with him. She could have taken any number of paths, but she chose the one that was in keeping with her nature: compassion.

Considering her often painful origins, many heroines either choose not to return to the “real world” or leave an open door policy to come and go as they wish between worlds. Where Campbell describes the refusal of the return as being either a failure on the hero’s part or his rejection of an earthly world gone mad, the heroine will often stay in the otherworld as an act of emancipation. Dorothy returns to Oz frequently, and eventually chooses to stay there permanently in book The Emerald City of Oz. Life in Kansas as a poor farm girl and a lonely orphan cannot compare to life in the fantastical otherworld surrounded by magical friends. In the end of La belle et la bête, Belle stays with her Beast in his surrealistic castle, where she has found love and acceptance. Belle’s love has freed the Beast, but his love has equally liberated her from her greedy and manipulative family. The heroine’s decision to stay feels natural, as if she has found her “tribe”. When the heroine is given the option to stay or return but chooses not to, we feel an odd sense of disapproval. In The Last Battle, Susan Pevensie’s decision to stop coming back to Narnia in favor of boys and cosmetics is treated as if she has betrayed her nation. He own brother, Peter, describes her has no longer being a friend to Narnia, as if she has committed high treason for simply choosing to grow up. Although mostly likely this was Lewis’ attempt to portray how adulthood shuts one out from the world of fable, it feels more like a condemnation of Susan’s choices as a woman and shunning her for making herself sexually available.

This decision of whether or not to return from the otherworld illustrates the greatest weapon a heroine has at her disposal: choice. Belle from La belle et la bête is often cited as being a very sexist heroine, bartered like chattel to a monster who holds her captive and uses coercion to get her to fall in love with him. In reality, everything that happens in the story is by her choosing. She volunteers to go to the Beast’s castle to save her cowardly father. She chooses to stay with the Beast. She chooses to return to the Beast, and in the end she chooses to love him. She could have let the poor thing die and been free to return to her life back home. Instead, Belle follows her moral compass and chooses a life of compassion and sacrifice. While these qualities are often viewed as antiquated characteristics foisted on women by a society invested in their docility, they are also the traits that most religions of the world promote as being the first steps towards enlightenment. Belle chooses the path to enlightenment. She is elevated above those that surround her and their petty, selfish ways. The passive heroine, reviled for her lack of “kick-ass” when seen through our modern, feminist filter, is actually a creature who is empowered from within. She chooses her actions or non-actions to benefit others, and not because she lacks self-worth. The creature without self-worth is not a heroine, she is the villainess, the Wicked Stepmother, or the Witch. The woman who does not understand her value lashes out at the world, and other women in particular. She seeks to destroy or steal their worth and make it her own. Instead, these heroines know they have value. This is what keeps them alive, and this is what gives them the resolve to sacrifice for others. The heroine says, “I may not have much, but what I have is yours. I can bear your burdens for you.” She knows she is stronger than those around her, and her capacity for compassion and forgiveness elevates her to a higher level of consciousness. Campbell throws the term “bodhisattva” (one who attains enlightenment but denies themselves Nirvana in favor of staying behind to teach others how to attain enlightenment) a great deal, but he seems not to recognize the heroine’s journey often leads directly to that aspiration.

Campbell, J. (1972). The hero with a thousand faces. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.

Murdock, M. (1990). The heroine’s journey. Boston, MA: Shambhala.

Estés, C. P. (1992). Women who run with the wolves: Myths and stories of the wild woman archetype. New York: Ballantine Books.

Baum, L. Frank, and John R. Neill. The Emerald City of Oz. New York: Morrow, 1993. Print.

Rowling, J. K. Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone. N.p.: Scholastic, 1998. Print.

Asbjørnsen, Peter Christen, Jørgen Engebretsen Moe, George Webbe Dasent, and William Stobbs. Popular Tales from the Norse. London: Bodley Head, 1969. Print.

Lewis, C. S., and Pauline Baynes. The Last Battle. New York: Macmillan, 1956. Print.

Kimball, Melanie. “From Folktales to Fiction: Orphan Characters in Children’s Literature.” Library Trends Winter (1999): 558-78. Web.

La Belle Et La Bête. Dir. Jean Cocteau. Studio Canal, 1946.

The Boon

Offerings, Whitehorn Reserve, WA. Photo by Scarlett Messenger
Offerings, Whitehorn Reserve, WA. Photo by Scarlett Messenger

The Boon

What is a quest without reward? The heroine starts her journey with an objective, a destination, or a goal. In many cases, the path is littered with distractions, shiny baubles that draw her away from attaining true transformation into her heroic self. Campbell seems to view the act of ascension and apotheosis as what he calls “the ultimate boon.” He views the reward of the hero as the attainment of godhood, that the moment the hero slays his foe he becomes one with the divine. Murdock cautions the heroine to avoid the trappings of “the illusory boon”, or the moments in life that feel like attainment but are really distractions. It is interesting to me that Campbell’s post-war American hero measures his success by the act of killing and Murdock’s heroine seems to be stuck on an eternal treadmill of distraction. So what is the reward for the heroine who has persevered?

Freedom.

Time and time again, we witness the heroine struggling against tyranny, oppression, abuse, and cruelty, with her primary goal being to liberate herself or others from the control of outside forces. The reward for Cinderella’s patience is she is freed from her stepmother’s enslavement. Gretel frees herself and her brother from the witch. The sister of the six swans frees her brothers from their curse and saves herself from being burned as a witch. Freedom is the true boon to the heroine. The right to autonomy, to control her own destiny, is the power denied women for centuries. This is where Campbell’s dismissal of fairy tales and bedtime stories told children by woman as being an inferior art form to “Myth” with a capital “M” does a disservice to the traditions of women everywhere. These tales are subversive freedom songs for generations of women who were in so many cases denied the ability to transcend their circumstances. Refused access to public life and academic discourse, women turned to stories that could be told around the fire while they spun wool or peeled vegetables to the people they spent most of their time with – their children. Requests for a bedtime story for a woman who had spent all day in back-breaking labor with little to no control over the direction of her life would result in the recitation of a story of another woman who lived a parallel, if romanticized, life of drudgery and helplessness. These are the daydreams of an oppressed gender. Campbell’s hero aspires to be equal to god, but the fairy tale heroine aspires only to be equal to men.

So many times, the fairy tale is dismissed as being sexist because of their focus on the physical attributes of the heroine. We think the emphasis on the youth and beauty of the heroine is a social constraint, as if only the beautiful are deserving of our attention. This is a distraction. We have used this as a way of marginalizing the heroine as little more than a “pretty young thing”, rather than treating her beauty as symbolic of her character and charisma. Rather than redefining beauty to match the image of the heroine, we redefine the heroine to match our idea of beauty. Action movies are filled with slender, young women in tight clothing who throw punches that defy the laws of physics for a creature so frail looking. Disney’s princesses are shockingly uniform: tiny waist, large head, huge eyes, demure mouth, and pert nose. The heroine is not rewarded with beauty, nor is she rewarded for her beauty.

In this weeks film, The Hunger, Sarah is a scientist studying the effects of aging and searching for the fountain of youth. When she crosses paths with Miriam, a 6,000 year old vampire, and her 300 year old consort John, her life is completely altered. John is slowly dying of old age, something that has happened to each of Miriams’s past lovers after only a few hundred years have passed. Unfortunately, her lovers do not die, rather they remain as withered, sentient corpses kept in coffins in her attic for all eternity. When Miriam attempts to transform Sarah into John’s replacement against her will, Sarah rebels. In an effort to kill both herself and Miriam, Sarah frees the corpse army, who descend on Miriam and finish the task. The lovers are finally freed, and Sarah survives the ordeal to replace Miriam as the next eternal vampire. It is important to note that the original ending of this film had both Sarah and Miriam dying, but studio interference changed this. Sarah is freed from Miriam, and frees her predecessors as well. There is no prince in this story, and while Susan Sarandon as Sarah is not exactly an ugly duckling, her short, boyish hair and 80s androgyny make her stand out from the perky, girlish concept of the fairy tale heroine, as does her age of 37 at the time of filming. She is offered the security of a wealthy and powerful spouse through Catherine Deneuve’s Miriam, but chooses her own path on her own terms. He destiny is her own, she has won her freedom. One can’t help but wonder what a woman with her scientific mind would be able to accomplish in 6,000 years.

We see the Handsome Prince as being the boon, but he is yet another of the false rewards cast in our path to throw us off the trail. The marriage is not the reward, the implied power that comes with being a princess is. The prince is a means to an end, he is the only gateway she has to changing her station in the fairy tale realm. He is never much more than a device, and more often than not the emphasis of the story is on his undying love for her, not how she actually feels about him. This isn’t a love story, it’s about role reversal. He is often shown to be a man willing to do anything for her. He will climb any mountain, slay any dragon, he is at her disposal. In a word, he is a slave. She has become the one with the ability to decide fate, to determine her destiny, and where she goes he will follow. This, not wealth or conquest or even godhood, is the boon of the fairy tale heroine.

References

Campbell, J. (1972). The hero with a thousand faces. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.

Murdock, M. (1990). The heroine’s journey. Boston, MA: Shambhala.

Estés, C. P. (1992). Women who run with the wolves: Myths and stories of the wild woman archetype. New York: Ballantine Books.

Dundes, L. (2001). Disney’s modern heroine Pocahontas: Revealing age-old gender stereotypes and role discontinuity under a façade of liberation. The Social Science Journal, 38(3), 353-365.

Scott, T. (Director). (1983). The Hunger [Motion picture on DVD]. MGM/UA Entertainment Co.

The Importance of Context in Myth Interpretation

Flowers, Lummi Island, WA. Photo by Scarlett Messenger
Flowers, Lummi Island, WA. Photo by Scarlett Messenger

The Importance of Context in Myth Interpretation

When I originally wrote this ISP, I had to come to terms with the fact that I had no idea what I was doing. I had never written an ISP before, and trying to design a curriculum around a subject you want to explore is rife with assumptions and conjecture about what you think you will learn and how the different materials will coordinate. When I planned on writing this essay, I assumed I would have reached a point where I would have something meaningful to contribute to this subject. Instead, I find myself asking even more questions than before. I feel that instead of a traditional essay, what I really need to do here is discuss my observations and consider the context of my sources. There are themes, biases, and concepts emerging that I had not expected to see, and I find the more I think about the backgrounds and intentions of the writers, the more I am understanding the framework that is being imposed on what is actually a far more nebulous construct than we believe.

Nothing is absolute or concrete in the world of the hero/heroine. Archetypes are represented in in a myriad of characters like reflections in a shattered funhouse mirror, and steps in the journey become conflated or are missing altogether. The journey is not a check list, rather a constellation of elements that contribute to an understanding of the phenomena. Like a good recipe for stew, it is the recognizable end result that makes it stew, not a set list of ingredients. Figures like the Herald are represented in Alice in Wonderland’s White Rabbit (Carroll 25), but finding one in Aschenputtel (Tatar 113) requires some serious bending of the archetype to fit. To think of the journey strictly in terms of the stages prescribed by Campbell in Hero With a Thousand Faces is to impose a dogmatic structure onto something that doe not have one. What we are dealing with instead is a series of common features. These are the hallmarks of what humans tend to view as the heroic journey, and their sequence and meaning are completely open to interpretation.

Another consideration that needs to be made is the context of the interpretation. Each of the three books I have chosen come from different writers, writing from different backgrounds and even different time periods. Unlike “hard science”, mythography and analysis is admittedly steeped in cultural bias and personal interpretation. Part of the purpose of myth is that a story’s interpretation is what binds a people together. We are all like the blind men touching the elephant. We all see what we want to see based on our limited understanding of what the story is telling us. In Tarsem Singh’s film The Fall, a hospitalized American stuntman in the early 20th century tells a very American story of bandits, escaped slaves, and Indians to a little Romanian girl. The story is visually portrayed from the little girl’s point of view, and it takes the viewer a moment to realize that the child is envisioning the tale through the filter of her Old World upbringing, imagining the “Indian” of the story to be a Hindu mystic and the endless sands of the Sahara taking the place of the sagebrush desert of the American West. This gives the viewer a unique perspective on how the same tale can evolve through not only the filter of the teller but the filter of the listener. That is the nature of myth and folklore. It is the skeleton that we all hang our own skins upon in order to see ourselves better.

Campbell’s filter comes from a place very inspired by Freud and Jung, with a dash of world religion tossed in. Campbell’s work was very influential on the New Age movement, as it provided a framework in which we could all view our own lives against the epic backdrop of the hero’s quest. The role of women in American society was decidedly different at the time this book was written, and although he attempts to interject heroine stories into the discussion, his primary focus is on the journey of what was viewed as the hero of his age: the virile, Post-War man who strives for mastery over himself and all he surveys. While these values are not necessarily contrary to the truth of a woman’s motives in her journey, in the narrative of myth and fairy tale the stories are likewise filtered through the context of their time and place. It is also critical to note that many who knew Campbell personally attested to his possessing a very bigoted and misogynistic world view outside of his academic studies (Larsen 510). Because of the deeply personal nature of myth interpretation, it is difficult to imagine that these personal opinions would not have had an influence on his writing. In spite of his reputation as being the definitive word on the subject, Campbell’s protagonists do not exist in a vacuum of white, male privilege. There are other viewpoints to be heard.

Women Who Run With the Wolves, on the other hand, is written by a woman in the latter half of the 20th century. Estes was a Jungian therapist who specialized in victims of abuse, disaster, and war with PTSD. She herself had a difficult early life, and her female heroine clearly has a combat-ready stance (Pinkola Estés). She portrays the heroine as a woman who has found harmony with her primal nature and is unafraid to snarl. As a poet, Estes is far less interested in narrative and more fascinated with symbols and connections. Many of the tales she discusses in her book were not stories I could find referenced elsewhere, and may either be her own creations or reworkings of older stories. Estes book was written during the tail-end of the Second-Wave Feminist movement based on the experiences of a woman who had seen women transition from the strangling domesticity of Campbell’s Post-War America with only 29.6% of the workforce being women to 45.2% by 1990 (Toosi 24). Wolves came at a time when women were becoming competitors for resources in the public realm in unprecedented numbers. Her call for women to see themselves as predator rather than prey was both timely and inspiring.

The Heroine’s Journey is a horse of a different color. Murdock is a family therapist, and as such her focus is on concepts of identity and inner cohesion rather than Campbell’s metaphysical narrative and Estes’ call to arms. Murdock is contemporaneous with Estes, and the emphasis on the feminist experience is present in both, but Murdock describes a heroine whose duality is a conflict between masculine and feminine rather than beast and woman. At their core, both arguments would seem to bolster each other, but Murdock’s take has a more intimate spin. The Heroine rejects the feminine, which she associates with the perceived weakness of her mother. Instead she embraces the masculinity of her father, which she considers the key to strength and success. This practice of taking the heroine and making her little more than a man with breasts is frequently seen in many of Hollywood’s more misguided attempts at producing what has been codified as “Strong Female Characters”. Because society has come to associate masculinity with strength and heroism, we must make our heroines conform to the masculine ideal of adventure, or a pale, cliché “woman as nurturer” variant that feels safe for our sensibilities. We are given attractive young women in skin-tight catsuits, tailor-made to appeal to the male gaze (Pennell, Behm-Morawitz 212), roundhouse kicking their way through throngs of bad guys rather than anything that attempts to show what truly motivates a woman to take on the heroic journey. Murdock’s description of this process of rejecting the feminine as inherently weak came at a time in our history when women were beginning to emulate more masculine modes of dress and behavior to prove their worth. To create a vision of strength in our heroine, we have to strip her of the perceived frivolity of femininity and inject her with machismo.

When Murdock states that the heroine struggles against the weakness of the mother, one cannot help but wonder if this weakness is something innate to the mother-figure or society’s filter veiling our eyes. The film Star Wars is a prime example of how the rejection of the feminine mother-figure as weak is tightly woven into our perception of the heroine. The fact that Princess Leia is rarely mentioned as a heroine and plays a secondary role to her brother Luke Skywalker does her a disservice. Leia is a freedom fighter motivated by compassion for her people. She is tortured in the line of duty, and yet manages to maintain her composure even as she watches her entire planet obliterated by the Empire. Sadly, Leia’s fearlessness and willingness to risk her life for the good of humanity is overshadowed by memories of her in a brass bikini. She is a galactic mother bear, but we have reduced her to Jabba’s sex slave, Han’s girlfriend, and Luke’s sister. We minimize the heroine because she is often a creature that reacts rather than seeks. The hero may take on adventure for adventure’s sake, for conquest, or in defense of his people, but the heroine is seen through the scrim of what are considered “feminine drives”. When Campbell dismisses the exclusion of heroines from his book as being because “…women were too busy; they had too damn much to do to sit around thinking about stories.” (Campbell 145) it is because he didn’t consider the stories that women were participating in, namely fairy tales, as being important enough to study. Because in a male-centered culture, being willing to stand up to the beast that is trying to steal the loved ones from your arms is not seen as a show of strength, hunting and slaying a dragon is.

There is a reason why we consider the Disney Princesses princesses rather than heroines, even though many of them are. We don’t see Cinderella (Tatar 113) as heroic because all she did was have a good heart and wear a pretty dress. However Cinderella survived horrible abuse, rejection, and deprivation for years and managed to come out of the situation with her good heart in tact. We view her has having no agency, no power, and as little more than arm candy. Perhaps our drive to contextualize her against the masculine expectation that one must slay the dragon rather than survive it does a disservice to the core of feminism. Empowerment is not emulating the masculine, it is finding your own strengths and using them. Cinderella is not a dragon slayer, and she knows this about herself. Rather she is as a Zen monk, patiently waiting for her kindness to pay off, coping with an untenable situation until divine intervention rewards her patience. We see her as victim because of her enslavement, but ignore her triumph in retaining her humanity and mercy in the face of oppression. Thought provoking, however this line of thought leads down the rabbit hole of questions about how we define the heroine and if the context of Campbell’s hero is even relevant to her journey.


At the end of the first half of this ISP, I find I have to ask myself new questions. How concrete are these stages of the journey? Are there actual differences between the hero and the heroine? Must a heroine always be a fighter, or can she succeed in her journey in other ways? We think that the model for the heroine has changed over the years because of feminism, but have we just slapped new packaging on the same, old product? Most importantly, how does the context of the the mythographer change the perception of the myth, and how does the context of the listener or viewer interpret this? Clearly, there is more reading needed. I have been making every effort to incorporate other sources and opinions, as I don’t feel this course of study to be complete without as broad a spectrum as possible. By the end of this course, I hope to have a better picture of how all of these elements and world views coalesce into a more unified version of the heroine.

Bibliography

Alien. Dir. Ridley Scott. Perf. Sigourney Weaver. Twentieth-Century Fox, 1979. DVD.

Aliens. Dir. James Cameron. Perf. Sigourney Weaver. Twentieth Century Fox Home Entertainment, 1986. DVD.

Apuleius, and Erich Neumann. Amor and Psyche; the Psychic Development of the Feminine; a Commentary on the Tale by Apuleius. New York: Pantheon, 1956. Print.

Baum, L. Frank, W. W. Denslow, and Michael Patrick. Hearn. The Annotated Wizard of Oz: The Wonderful Wizard of Oz. New York: Norton, 2000. Print.

Bettelheim, Bruno. The Uses of Enchantment: The Meaning and Importance of Fairy Tales. New York: Knopf, 1976. Print.

Campbell, Joseph, and David Kudler. Pathways to Bliss: Mythology and Personal Transformation. Novato, CA: New World Library, 2004. Print.

Campbell, Joseph. The Hero with a Thousand Faces. Princeton, NJ: Princeton UP, 1972. Print.

Carroll, Lewis, Lewis Carroll, Martin Gardner, and John Tenniel. The Annotated Alice: Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland & Through the Looking Glass. New York: C.N. Potter, 1960. Print.

The Cell. Dir. Tarsem Singh. Perf. Jennifer Lopez. New Line Cinema, 2000. DVD.

Coraline. Dir. Henry Selick. By Neil Gaiman. Perf. Dakota Fanning. Focus Features, 2009. DVD.

The Descent. Dir. Neil Marshall. Perf. Shauna McDonald. Celador Films, 2006. DVD.

Dogma. Dir. Kevin Smith. Perf. Linda Fiorentino. Cinema Club, 1999. DVD.

Dundes, Lauren. “Disney’s Modern Heroine Pocahontas: Revealing Age-old Gender Stereotypes and Role Discontinuity under a Façade of Liberation.” The Social Science Journal 38.3 (2001): 353-65. Web.

Estés, Clarissa Pinkola. Women Who Run with the Wolves: Myths and Stories of the Wild Woman Archetype. New York: Ballantine, 1992. Print.

Fields, Donna Lee. “Rhymes with ‘Bitch ’: The Real Heroine of Fairy Tales.” EHumanista 26 (2014): 264-86. Web.

Grimm, Jacob, Wilhelm Grimm, and Maria Tatar. The Annotated Brothers Grimm. New York: W.W. Norton, 2004. Print.

Labyrinth. Dir. Jim Henson. Perf. Jennifer Connelly. Henson Associates/Lucasfilm, 1986. DVD.

Larsen, Stephen, and Robin Larsen. A Fire in the Mind: The Life of Joseph Campbell. New York: Doubleday, 1991. Print.

Legend. Dir. Ridley Scott. Perf. Mia Sara. Embassy International Pictures, 1985. DVD.

MirrorMask. Dir. Dave McKean. Perf. Stephanie Leonidas. Sony Pictures Home Entertainment, 2006. DVD.

Murdock, Maureen. The Heroine’s Journey. Boston, MA: Shambhala, 1990. Print.

Murdock, Maureen. “Meet Maureen Murdock.” Maureen Murdock. N.p., n.d. Web. 29 Oct. 2015.

Palumbo, Donald. “The Monomyth in James Cameron’s The Terminator: Sarah as Monomythic Heroine.” J Popular Culture The Journal of Popular Culture 41.3 (2008): 413-27. Web.

Pennell, Hillary, and Elizabeth Behm-Morawitz. “The Empowering (Super) Heroine? The Effects of Sexualized Female Characters in Superhero Films on Women.” Sex Roles 72.5-6 (2015): 211-20. Web.

Pinkola Estés, Clarissa. “Biography.” Dr. Clarissa Pinkola Estés. N.p., n.d. Web. 30 Oct. 2015.

Star Wars. Dir. George Lucas. Perf. Carrie Fisher. Twentieth-Century Fox Corp., 1977. DVD.

Tatar, Maria. The Hard Facts of the Grimms’ Fairy Tales. Princeton, NJ: Princeton UP, 1987. Print.

Toosi, Mitra. “A Century of Change: The U.S. Labor Force, 1950–2050.” Monthly Labor Review May (2002): 15-28. Print.

V for Vendetta. Dir. Andy Wachowski. By Lana Wachowski. Perf. Natalie Portman. Warner Bros., 2005.

Williams, Christy. “Who’s Wicked Now? The Stepmother as Fairy-Tale Heroine.” Marvels & Tales 24.2 (2010): 255-71. Web.

Duality and Sacred Marriage

Arbor, Lummi Island, WA. Photo by Scarlett Messenger
Arbor, Lummi Island, WA. Photo by Scarlett Messenger

Duality and Sacred Marriage

This week’s theme was all about duality. In Hero, Campbell discussed woman as goddess and temptress, which I felt was a bit one-sided. He describes the rejection of the female by the hero as being rejection of life, the female in this case usually being depicted as a hideous hag who poses a challenge to the hero that includes some form of physical or sexual contact. The hero’s repulsion at the thought of this act is his rejection of the visceral and chthonic nature of life itself. It is only the hero who can embrace the less “savory” aspects of being who is given the opportunity to ascend to a state of unity with the goddess. I find this assessment a bit biased, in that it does not usually seem to pan out the same for the female heroine. If women are indeed the primal personification of the bodily requirements of life, why then does not the heroine’s journey include a male figure that seeks to unite her corporeal nature with his supposed virtuous nature? Instead, Campbell sites examples of the virtuous maiden winning the heart of the bestial male aspect. Although I acknowledge the long-held belief by scholars that “girls are icky because they bleed and stuff”, I think really what we are witnessing is the unification of the hero/heroine with their own primal nature, regardless of gender. There are as many examples of the gentle heroine/bestial man as there are gentle hero/bestial woman, but history is written by the victor…

So rather than seeing this phenomenon as the unification of the human and the goddess, maybe what we are seeing is the join of two halves of the same whole. Like Aristophanes’ speech in Plato’s Symposium, what was once torn asunder by the gods takes the act of a hero/heroine to repair. In Wolves, Estes discusses that the hero Manawee can only reveal the names of the sisters he is trying to woo once he dispatches his faithful little dog to spy on them. By incorporating and trusting his animal side, the quest is accomplished, and he wins his bride. Animus and anima are reunited through the merging of the primal and the ascended, or the sacred and the profane.

I have discussed previously the transformation of the heroine into her dark aspect as a common theme seen in the heroine’s journey. This is the opposite of the unification of the animus and anima or the god/goddess with the hero/heroine. It is the dividing of the heroine into her own diametrically opposed halves. This weeks films exemplified this duality perfectly. In Ridley Scott’s Legend, Princess Lilli is a young woman in a literal fairy tale world. She is love with Jack, who is feral boy who introduces her to the unicorns of his enchanted forest. When her attempts to touch the unicorns lead to their capture by a demonic force, she goes on a quest to rescue them and save the world from eternal darkness. In the process she is captured by the demon, and tempted by him with jewels, gowns, and other finery to be his bride. We witness Lilli fighting these temptations, but she appears to succumb to their charms and eventually transforms into Dark Lilli. The physical transformation from a young girl in a flowing white dress into the the raven-haired, bat-like woman is dramatic. Although in the end her transformation is shown to be partly ruse to gain the demon’s trust in order to free the unicorns, it is easy to see how the duality of Lilli is not only drawn between good and evil. The acceptance of the pubescent heroine of her “dark” aspect is the acceptance of adulthood. She is to become a woman and a bride, and this is the demarcation between life and death. Someone once told me that having children is the point in which you begin to die. They did not mean this in a negative way, only that this is the point where the focus of your life becomes rooted in the next generation and not in your own. As someone who has remained child-free by choice, I can’t attest to this. For the heroine, shedding her innocence to realize her fertile potential is the first step towards realizing her own mortality and accepting her place in the wheel of life.

We also see this in Jim Henson’s Labyrinth, but interestingly enough the creators of this film seem more aware of the implications of this transformation. When Sarah throws a tantrum and wishes for her infant brother to be taken by the Goblin King (played by the perfectly cast, sexually ambiguous heartthrob David Bowie), he gives her until midnight to retrieve the child from the Labyrinth. His communications with Sarah are sinister but flirtatious. He attempts to woo her, and in a dream sequence she fantasizes dancing with him at an elaborate ball in a glittering fantasy dress. Here her transformation is not into Dark Sarah, but Adult Sarah.

At the end of the film, in their final confrontation, he reveals to her that he cannot understand why she is fighting him:

*Everything*! Everything that you wanted I have done. You asked that the child be taken. I took him. You cowered before me, I was frightening. I have reordered time. I have turned the world upside down, and I have done it all for *you*! I am exhausted from living up to your expectations. Isn’t that generous?”

The Goblin King is her own wish for a mate come to life. After he reveals this to her, it isn’t long before she realizes he has no power over her, and he transforms into an owl and flies away. In the end, Sarah finds that she can embrace her impending womanhood, but knows that she need not sever all her ties with her childhood flights of fancy to do so.

(I am cutting this week’s journal a bit short, as I have 3 essays due this week (including this class) and over 300 pages of reading to do, half of them in German. Time management only goes so far as there are only so many hours in a day!)

References

Henson, J. (Director). (1986). Labyrinth [Motion picture on DVD]. Henson Associates/Lucasfilm.

Scott, R. (Director). (1985). Legend [Motion picture on DVD].

Campbell, J. (1972). The hero with a thousand faces. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.

Murdock, M. (1990). The heroine’s journey. Boston, MA: Shambhala.

Estés, C. P. (1992). Women who run with the wolves: Myths and stories of the wild woman archetype. New York: Ballantine Books.

The Road of Trials

Road Sign, Lummi Island, WA. Photo by Scarlett Messenger
Road Sign, Lummi Island, WA. Photo by Scarlett Messenger

The Road of Trials

I married late in life. I was 36 before I met my now-husband, and was married just weeks before my 39th birthday. Part of my reluctance to marry was my inability to “settle” for less than what I thought I deserved. Ultimately, all of my relationships turned sour, each man proving to be either a disappointment or running for the hills at the first emergence of my rather intense nature. The last relationship I had before meeting my husband was with a handsome man who was an accomplished drummer and audio engineer. After that went belly-up, I was talking to a friend about it, telling her that I was bummed because he was a drummer and I liked drummers. She asked me why. I stopped and realized that the reason I found drummers attractive was because I had always wanted to learn how to play drums. It had nothing to do with any quality playing the drums actually gave him and everything to do with living vicariously through his accomplishments. He did the things that society had told me were things I could not do. This prompted a deeper reflection on my life and my values when it came to my relationships with men. It dawned on me that I needed to visualize my ideal man and become him, rather than try to date him.

So I did. Although, to be honest, the drum thing never really panned out, I changed my self-perception to one that incorporated this male figure as already being a part of me, not someone I had to search for. Like Dorothy in The Wizard of Oz, I found that I had to look no further than my own backyard for self-fulfillment. It was only a few short months after this that I met my husband. Had I not had this revelation, I never would have been at the right place and time and in the right frame of mind to meet him. Because I was no longer seeking someone to complete me I found some one who could be my accomplice in life.

In many heroine stories, the heroine accomplishes her journey with the assistance of an entourage of helpers. These sidekicks are usually magical or alien in nature, and are interestingly most often male. In these stories, the heroine often encounters her sidekicks in a state of distress. After rescuing them, they become part of her world, incorporated into her quest. Dorothy had The Scarecrow, Tin Woodsman, Cowardly Lion, and even Toto. Snow White had her dwarfs. These helpers often swoop in to assist the heroine with a task or peril that is perfectly suited to their abilities. It is possible that these male figures are the manifestations of her animus. They are aspects of herself that she needs to acknowledge in order to succeed in her quest. Although they come to her aid throughout her quest, they are not her saviors. They are tools at her disposal. She must warmly embrace them before she can call upon them. It is only through uniting with her animus that she can tap into her full potential.

In the movie The Cell, the main character Catherine is a child psychologist who is able to enter the dreams of her patients via a technological breakthrough. When a serial killer is found in a catatonic state, she is forced to use this ability to help police uncover where is latest victim is being held captive before time runs out. Because this film is literally set in the realm of the subconscious, her trials are primarily psychological but carry the potential for her demise in the real world (as they say, if you die in your dreams, you die in real life.) Our heroine is confronted with scenarios designed to fill her with fear or self-doubt. She is even captured at one point and subjected to the “Dark Princess” transformation as the killer’s love slave. In this film, the symbolism of the trials themselves is what matters, because it is through these symbols the secrets of the killer are revealed. The trials of the heroine as symbols for the clandestine theme of the quest are often present in the journey, as we see in the myth of Eros and Psyche. When Aphrodite charges Psyche with a series of trials to prove her love for Eros, they begin with the impossible task of sorting a multitude of seeds before dawn. Her final task is to travel to the Underworld and retrieve Persephone’s beauty treatment for Aphrodite, which ends with Psyche falling into a death-like torpor before being rescued by Eros. The symbolic progression from seed to death is evident, as is the entropy of life from chaos to order and back to chaos again. The secrets of the nature of romantic love, the combining of psyche and the state of eros, is the fuel of the mechanism of life.

The film The Descent is a trial of a much different nature, symbolically going from death to rebirth from the underworld. The heroine, Sarah, is spelunking with a group of women in Appalachia when they become trapped in an unmapped cave system. They encounter a group of horrific cannibalistic humanoid monsters that proceed to reduce the films cast by attrition. In the beginning of the film, Sarah is in mourning for her husband and daughter, who died a year previously in an unfortunate accident. She is fragile, broken, and unable to cope with much of what life has handed her. As she is presented with increasingly perilous situations, she becomes more and more adept at survival, and becomes more like the monsters she is hiding from. The final scene of her clawing her way out of the earth, bloody and gasping, after enduring hours of pain and torment might be an obvious symbolic choice, but is no less powerful to the viewer. It is made even more poignant when it is revealed that this is potentially her hallucination to escape the hellish underworld she is trapped in. This act of rebirth could be seen as representing the character’s need to live again after the profound loss of her family.

SPOILER WARNING: This is the end of the movie, needless to say it will ruin the film for you if you haven’t seen it.
VIOLENCE WARNING: The following clip is pretty gory.

For all of these heroines, their trials are not just a means to an end. In fact, we often see that these trials are almost a distraction from their overtly intended goal (e.g. to get home, free their loved one, escape from monsters.) These trials are commonly symbolic situations she finds herself in that often require her to call upon the skills of her animus to survive, usually in the form of enchanted companions.

References

Singh, T. (Director). (2000). The Cell [Motion picture on DVD]. New Line Cinema.

Marshall, N. (Director). (2006). The descent [Motion picture on DVD]. England: Celador Films.
Baum, L. F., Denslow, W. W., & Hearn, M. P. (2000). The annotated Wizard of Oz: The wonderful Wizard of Oz. New York: Norton.

Carroll, L., Carroll, L., Gardner, M., & Tenniel, J. (1960). The annotated Alice: Alice’s adventures in Wonderland & Through the looking glass. New York: C.N. Potter.

A., & Neumann, E. (1956). Amor and Psyche; the psychic development of the feminine; a commentary on the tale by Apuleius. New York: Pantheon Books.

Bettelheim, B. (1976). The uses of enchantment: The meaning and importance of fairy tales. New York: Knopf.

Campbell, J. (1972). The hero with a thousand faces. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.

Murdock, M. (1990). The heroine’s journey. Boston, MA: Shambhala.

Estés, C. P. (1992). Women who run with the wolves: Myths and stories of the wild woman archetype. New York: Ballantine Books.

The Initiation/The Belly of the Whale

Library Fountain, Lummi Island, WA. Photo by Scarlett Messenger
Library Fountain, Lummi Island, WA. Photo by Scarlett Messenger

The Initiation/The Belly of the Whale

In this week’s reading, both Campbell and Estes discuss the concept of the Belly of the Whale, or the place where the the hero/heroine is finally severed from their mundane life and reborn as the hero. This place or state is the chrysalis where our caterpillar becomes a butterfly. An interesting fact about the metamorphosis of butterflies: most people think that the worm goes into its cocoon, grows a pair of wings, etc. and then comes out transformed. In actuality, the caterpillar dissolves completely into cellular sludge and its raw biological material is used to build a completely new creature. The Belly of the Whale is not a friendly place, it is often violent and bloody. These stories demonstrate that personal transformation for the hero/heroine is psychic wetwork. It is terrifying to experience. What I found most interesting about the specific stories I read and watched this week was that in most of them it was the heroine’s world or those around her who were transformed more than she was.

Estes discusses the story of Bluebeard and claims that the bride detests Bluebeard initially because her inner wolf nature instinctively knows that he is a villain, but that her culturally coaxed “good girl” nature convinces her not to trust her instincts. This hit a flat note with me. I would argue that this interpretation of the bride as a naive pawn is the path of least resistance. In this scenario, the bride is either condemned to marry a murderous psychopath because of her culturally conditioned accommodating nature or her inner wild woman snarls and cowers from the journey like a beaten dog. For some reason we can accept the notion that the male hero can be pulled toward adventure by deliberately marching towards the danger, but a woman must be tricked or misled toward hers. The true heroine does not hide from her journey, no matter what her misgivings. Without her willing participation, we have no story.

Bluebeard is often told as a cautionary tale to woman against what our society considers to be some of their more undesirable female traits: curiosity, disobedience, and treachery. However, it is her inner animal instinct that actually draws her to Bluebeard, not the blundering wonder of a woman-child. Our heroine willingly seeks adventure rather than shying away from it. She can smell the evil within him and senses that he is a worthy opponent. Her exploration of the house and subsequent entering of the bloody chamber is a literal crossing of the threshold into the belly of the beast. She is not randomly nosing about, her senses are guiding her towards her discovery. She must reveal the villain before she can vanquish him. And in the end, he is indeed vanquished. She is the predator in this story, subconsciously hunting and eliminating a dark blight upon the land thanks to her feral nature. Bluebeard’s heroine isn’t so much transformed as she is awakened. She already has these skills and this knowledge at her disposal, but she seems to be realizing this as the story unfolds.

In the animated film Coraline, our heroine is also presented with a secret room and distinctive key. This tiny door in the parlor of her new house is a huge temptation to the curious and neglected girl. When she finally opens the door and travels to the otherworld to meet her “Other Mother”, everything seems to be her greatest wish come true. The Other Mother cooks and takes an interest in her activities, the yard is planted with hundreds of flowers, just like she had been begging her parents for, and everything is warm and filled with whimsy and light. Eventually, things turn sour, and the Other Mother is revealed to be a monster. Coraline eventually returns to her original family having slain the beast and saved the souls of the Other Mothers victims. Unlike many heroines, Coraline does not just return home more accepting of her circumstances, like Dorothy in the Wizard of Oz coming to terms with a dreary existence in Depression-era Kansas. Coraline brings some of the “Belly of the Beast” with her, convincing her parents to plant the garden she wants and building an extended family from the eccentric characters that live in the apartments around them. Her transformation is not into a more accepting and passive creature, but into someone who is more capable of seeing what works in her world and changing the things that don’t.

In Mirrormask, Helena is a young girl who lives and works in her parents circus. After a particularly cruel argument her mother collapses and falls ill with what appears to be a brain tumor. Eventually, Helena enters the otherworld, a disturbingly phantasmagorical place where everyone wears a mask and shadows threaten to destroy everything. At one point, we bear witness to what has become a common theme in many heroine stories: the literal transformation of the heroine into the dark counterpart. We see her ritually dressed and transformed into The Princess, her sinister analogue from the otherworld who has taken her place in the real world. She briefly takes her place next to the Dark Queen until her companion reminds her of her true identity. In most of these stories this transformation seems to resolve itself when something or someone reminds the heroine what her true nature is. We see this happen to Lily in the film Legend, Willow from TV’s Buffy the Vampire Slayer, and Katherine from the horror movie The Cell, to name a few. The heroine then has to decide which path she should take, and invariably decided to return to her true self. To remain in her negatively transformed state is to remain trapped in the otherworld and literally lose her self.

Because I was focused on getting caught up, I did not have much of an opportunity this week to explore Campbell’s Guardian of the Threshold, but it is a subject that I know will come back around in future readings. Hopefully I can address it then. I also would like to return to the “Nega-Heroine/Mother” concept as well.

References

Selick, H. (Director). (2009). Coraline [Motion picture on DVD]. United States: Focus Features.

McKean, D. (Director). (2006). Mirrormask [Motion picture on DVD]. Sony pictures home entertainment.

Grimm, J., Grimm, W., & Tatar, M. (2004). The annotated Brothers Grimm. New York: W.W. Norton.

Campbell, J. (1972). The hero with a thousand faces. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.

Murdock, M. (1990). The heroine’s journey. Boston, MA: Shambhala.

Estés, C. P. (1992). Women who run with the wolves: Myths and stories of the wild woman archetype. New York: Ballantine Books.

The Call to Adventure/Separation from the Mother

Baker Preserve, Lummi Island, WA. Photo by Scarlett Messenger
Baker Preserve, Lummi Island, WA. Photo by Scarlett Messenger

The Call to Adventure/Separation from the Mother

For this ISP, I deliberately selected two books that I have been meaning to read but never gotten around to it. The Hero with a Thousand Faces by Joseph Campbell and Women Who Run with the Wolves by Clarissa Pinkola Estes. I have read excerpts from them for various classes, but this is the first time I have sat down and read the books in their entirety. In addition I am reading The Heroine’s Journey by Maureen Murdock, at the behest of my sponsor. Since this is my first ISP, and every adventure has a beginning, that is where I am starting: the beginning of each book discussing how adventures begin.

What is different about the path of the heroine and the hero? Campbell’s work discusses the journey from an almost exclusively male point of view. In fact, in the first two chapters, female characters are primarily described in the section discussing the refusal of adventure. He speaks of the hero in terms of his inner, Freudian-inspired motives and drives. Estes, rather than specifically discussing the beginning of adventure, chooses to use the archetype of La Loba, or Wolf Woman, as the actual source of the call. Murdock takes the issue in yet another direction by emphasizing separation from the mother and reconciliation with the concept of the feminine as the critical first step. For Campbell, the mythologist, the call comes from the spiritual world. For Estes, the Jungian analyst, the call comes from archetype within, from the collective unconsciousness we share. For Murdock, also a Jungian psychotherapist, she finds the answer in the personal dynamic between the heroine and society’s expectations placed on women.

Campbell mentions The Herald, a figure who’s job it is to call the hero to his destiny and initiate the journey. This figure is often portrayed as grotesque or feared. Estes La Loba is certainly a fearsome figure, described as the Bone Woman who raises the dead, a feral and earthy creature. The Herald of the heroine’s journey seems to manifest in a friendlier but no less anxious way. We can see a different example of The Herald in The White Rabbit of Alice in Wonderland. Although few would argue that the bunny is grotesque, his preoccupation with time, authority, and death at the hands of the Queen certainly makes him a awesome figure for the adolescent Alice. He is Adulthood, he has obligations, his time is limited. Her decision to follow him is not reckless, it is her decision to heed the call of her own curiosity in spite her fears. Similarly, Toto from the Wizard of Oz is another Herald, although again of a far less frightening countenance than La Loba. In the film version of the tale, he is the reason Dorothy is caught outside in the tornado that carries her to Oz, and her motherly concern for his safety is the impetus for many different plot points in the journey. Toto is her child, another glimpse of impeding Adulthood leading her onward. Neither The White Rabbit nor Toto provides any guidance or advice as to how their heroines should proceed. While they share similarities, The Herald should not be confused with The Guide, which we will be discussing later in this class. The Herald’s only job is to beckon, not to inform. In some cases, the Herald will share the duties of the Guide, but they are not the same role.

This week’s films were Kevin Smith’s comedy Dogma and The Wachowski’s dystopian V for Vendetta. In both films, the heroine is called to service for a greater cause. In Dogma, the heroine Bethany is informed by The Metatron (voice of God, who appears as a pillar of flame initially, before douses him with a fire extinguisher, revealing him to be Alan Rickman) that she is the Last Scion, or descendant of Christ, and is the only one who can stop the apocalyptic actions of a pair of fallen angels, thus saving the world. She naturally refuses such a dangerous and terrifying responsibility, as most people would. She states that she is not worthy of such a task, due to her loss of faith over being incapable of having children. The Metatron informs her that she needs to put her resentments aside, as she is being offered the chance to become mother and protector to the entire world instead. Bethany eventually relents and sets off to New Jersey, which is where most apocalypses take place. But this act is what differentiates the hero/heroine from the rest of us. It isn’t bravery, strength, or magic powers. It is the willingness to follow The Herald, even if you aren’t certain of what lies ahead.

In V for Vendetta, the heroine Evey is pressed into service against a tyrannical British police state by a masked man who seems almost inhuman in his combat abilities and tolerance for pain. For the first half of the film, she refuses to do little more than the bare minimum to help his cause, although she expresses sympathy with his beliefs. She openly claims her fear, says she wishes she could be strong but she isn’t. After the masked man orchestrates her staged imprisonment and torture, she discovers the fortitude within herself to transcend her fear and follow The Herald. Although the movie is primarily concerned with her transformation into the heroine, her future trajectory as the heroine is implied by her actions as she takes place of the masked man after his death.

Interestingly, all of these women share something that Murdock alludes to in her book: the Absent Mother. Dorothy, Evey, and Bethany are orphans. Alice’s mother is unknown, and in fact a text search of the online version of the book Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland reveals not a single reference to the word “mother”. These are all girls on the cusp of puberty who have been separated from the mother, for better or for worse, and are on their way to discovering themselves as the future women they will become. This is, at least in part, at the core of the heroine’s journey: who will you be when you finally have to stand on your own?

In each of these examples, the heroine is called by The Herald to address an injustice (although in Alice’s case, her confrontation with the Queen is less motivated by the urging of others as it is her own impatience with the bully and self-preservation.) Her fear and reluctance may or may not be a clearly stated issue, but in the end she realizes she has to confront that fear to protect the weak and disenfranchised. She might refuse the call with an “it ain’t me” moment, like Evey and Bethany, before heeding The Herald. She might go willingly toward adventure out of curiosity and boredom with society’s restrictions on young girls, like Alice. She might go out of love and concern, like Dorothy. In the end, however, in order for us to have a journey, she has to put aside her fear and say yes to The Herald.

References

Smith, K. (Director). (1999). Dogma [Motion picture on DVD]. London: Cinema Club.

V for vendetta [Motion picture on DVD]. (2005). USA: Warner Bros. Pictures.

Baum, L. F., Denslow, W. W., & Hearn, M. P. (2000). The annotated Wizard of Oz: The wonderful Wizard of Oz. New York: Norton.

Carroll, L., Carroll, L., Gardner, M., & Tenniel, J. (1960). The annotated Alice: Alice’s adventures in Wonderland & Through the looking glass. New York: C.N. Potter.

Campbell, J. (1972). The hero with a thousand faces. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.

Murdock, M. (1990). The heroine’s journey. Boston, MA: Shambhala.

Estés, C. P. (1992). Women who run with the wolves: Myths and stories of the wild woman archetype. New York: Ballantine Books.