26. My name references writing, my title references writing, I follow a ton of writing blogs, but know it is all a sham. I reblog whatever. Also, this theme is so bad because it's modelled from the mobile app. Good luck. //Icon is Isabella Yamamoto from Paradise Kiss / Banner by Umai Kaji//
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Rouillense Calystro for @mournfulwizard !! He is sooooooo @___@
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What Are Archetypes And How To Use Them!
Character archetypes are one of the many tools in a writer's arsenal to write believable and universally relatable characters which transcend geography, time, and culture!
Throughout this post, I will be discussing what archetypes are, how to use them, and how to subvert them.
What Are Character Archetypes?
What are character archetypes? Archetypes are kinda like templates that are grouped into categories depending on their traits, experiences, and actions.
When thinking about "archetypes", your mind may jump to the archetypes in the major Arcana which represent different aspects of life! Like character archetypes, the archetypes represented in the Arcana encompass a multitude of various traits, experiences, and meanings depending on the reader of the tarot or, with character archetypes), interpretations by the author!
Archetypes are meant to transcend time, geography, location, and the differences between other individuals to communicate universal truths about humanity.
But it's important to use archetypes correctly! All characters require character development and if you don't use character development or there isn't enough character then the characters are going to be flat, boring, and unoriginal.
The difference between "stock characters" and "archetypes" is the fact that stock characters aren't meant to be main characters. Stock characters are the strict librarian that tells the lovers to be quiet, the mean bully that gets humiliated, or the MC's lovingly dead mom.
They are static, flat characters who are meant to serve as filler. Archetypes are the foundation to create complex, changing characters!
Mixing Character Archetypes
Most characters fall into multiple character archetypes depending on the perspective that you are looking at. Mixing character archetypes allows your characters to be familiar but not cliche!
Character Archetypes (And How To Subvert Them)
There are way too many archetypes so I'm just going to give a quick run-by!
The Caregiver
The caregiver is a character who selflessly and whole-heartedly supports their loved ones. They often tend to fall into the Mentor role, the Best Friend role, or something else. It's common to see the Caregiver as an accompanying character to the Hero.
Traits: Selfless, Kind, Compassionate, Honorable, Loving
Pitfalls: Too selfless, tends to lack growth or goals, a bit too dedicated to assholes
Subvert: Caregiver can serve as an enabling force who encourages the Hero or the Villain to follow all of their desires and will force their loved one to deny any healthy accountability for their bad behavior. The Caregiver can be a shallow individual who has a tendency of nearly abandoning the group when things seem hopeless. The Caregiver can show some selfishness
Everyman
The Everyman is your regular Joe-Shmoe who isn't smart enough to be a Mad Scientist but not dumb enough to be the resident Idiot. They aren't particular ugly nor particularly attractive (but they tend to get the love interest anyway). They are kinda average in most respects.
The Everyman is humble and cooperative but not stand out.
Traits: Humble, Hard-working, Grounded, Relatable, Cooperative
Pitfalls: This is the protagonist for 95% of stories. Tends to flail around so much that the audience wonders why they are even needed.
Subvert: The Everyman tends to fall into the Innocent type. Basically, oblivious as all heck and a bystander. The Everyman could be a secret mastermind behind the whole operation and more aware than anyone suspects.
The Creator
Constantly creative and constantly making something. Their creation can be physical (inventor) or in the divine sense. To the Creator, there is nothing that is more important than what they are trying to make, and they are willing to sacrifice themselves and others to reach their goal.
Traits: Obsession, imaginative, strong-willed, egotistical
Pitfalls: The Creator tends to be unsympathetic and not that obviously relatable to the non-creative types.
Subvert: Actually try and make this Mad Scientist or God relatable. Many people have that one thing that they would sacrifice their time and life for whether that be their job, their family, their identity, or their creative pursuits. Connecting that creation to these universal truths will turn your one-dimensional character into a tragedy or masterpiece.
The Explorer
They want to break boundaries, take risks, and travel the world for something new. They yearn for something more than a normal life. They want to find their purpose and they don't believe their purpose lies in the mundane life everyone wants them to live.
Traits: Courageous, independent, nonconforming, driven, curious
Pitfalls: Explorer types tend to be the garden-variety " I want to explore this place". Highly common protagonists.
Subvert: Have the Explorer be a little bit lost in the world. They aren't courageous about their desires and they don't even really know what they want. They just know they don't want to spend the rest of their life here. They are afraid of stagnation. They are afraid of looking back on their life and only being able to feel regret. Make it spiritual. Make it about fear.
The Hero
The Hero rises to the challenge. They can't or refuse to stand by any longer to the injustice surrounding them. They fight the villains.
Traits: Honorable, Justice-Orientated, Strong
Pitfalls: One-Dimensional. "really? another story about Superman going rogue and killing people because angst?"
Subvert: At this point, having a character who is genuinely a good person who wants to try and be a good person is a subversion. Seriously, if you can only write an interesting character when they are evil or "morally complicated", they you are putting yourself in a box. They aren't perfect but they try. That's the thesis statement for heroes.
The Innocent
The Innocent is defined by their unending optimism and naivety with a child-life attitude (if they aren't an actual child). The Innocent tends to be the starting place for a character who will eventually have their comfortable life radically shifted by worldly events until their ignorance is swept away from them.
Traits: Trusting, Loving, Sincere, Open, Powerless, Oblivious
Pitfalls: So innocent to the point where they are obnoxious and not relatable to anyone above the age of 7. "Why is a man who has the ignorance of a child the Chosen One?"
Subvert: What if the Innocent isn't this childish person but actually acts serious? A story could have a character going on this journey to become the Innocent in an effort to get rid of their memories of the horrors of life that they have deemed unbearable. And they succeed. The Innocent could be someone whose naivety about the world often has them acting in cruel and insensitive ways.
The Lover
Ranging from the hedonistic players to the dreamy romantics, Lovers are guided by their heart. Like Creators, they also have an all-consuming obsession and dedication, although, in this case, the object of their obsession is the receiver of their love whether that be a person or an object.
They often overlap with the Caregiver.
Traits: Devoted, compassionate, caring, protective
Pitfalls: They often tend to be one-dimensional and horribly problematic.
Subvert: The recipient of their love could be an object, a friend, or a family member. Their love could also be demonstrated as purposefully toxic as their codepedent traits have the potential to intersect with Superior Complexes, Inferiority Complexes, and/or Savior Complexes.
The Rags-To-Riches Orphan
While not always a literal orphan, the Orphan starts in a state of poverty and unimportance who transitions into a life of opulence and excitement.
Beyond that, Orphans tend to fall into Found Families, as a desire for belonging often reunites them with either social outcasts or the Riches group.
Traits: Survivalists, empathetic, determined, driven
Pitfalls: Another orphan? Really? Wow, you got picked up off the street and became unbelievablely rich? How relatable.
Subvert: The Orphan uses their skills and resources from their time in poverty to secure power, influence, and popularity from the masses as their relatable upbringing, connects to the underground market, and survivalist mentality leads them to be even more cunning and manipulative than the natural-born. The Orphan isn't as innocent and ignorant as everyone seems to think they're. The Orphan falls from their rich status. The Orphan hates their found family and relishes in the opportunity to leave them.
The Rebel
The Rebel leads the charge against flawed leaders and power structures when the balance of society is threatened. They might be the public head of a rebellion, a charismatic outsider, someone who works in the shadows, or just someone whose another James Dean- knock-off.
Traits: Natural leaders, courageous, inspiring, strong, charismatic
Pitfalls: Romancization of rebel groups and abusive behaviors as , more often than not, rebel groups establish a new order that is the same or even worse than the previous group.
Subvert: What if we didn't contribute to the massive romantization of rebel authority and instead investigated how extremists groups can manipulate desperate citizens into horrible governments. Because Hitler was a rebel who instigated a national rebellion. What if we explored the topic of co-option as previous signs of rebelliousness and civil rights are being commercialized for right-wing non-pocs and "rebellious" teens?
The Mentor
The Mentor is the character who is typically off in the corner, training the protagonist with life advice such as "life happens man" and "if you klll a killer, that's somehow worse than being that killer".
Because writers don't know how to write actual wisdom so they copy facebook quotes and look up a thesarus for some "fancy" words
Traits: "Wise", caring, patient, insightful, rational
Pitfalls: "Author! Arthor! This a serious topic with a huge diversity of variables and an imperfect solution as humans are inherently imperfect! This advice seems really oversimplified and kinda biased!
Subvert: What if the mentor's teachings are revealed to be heavily biased and based on misinformation which is reflective of the mentor's upbringing? What if the mentor is secretly working with the antagonist to feed the fledgling Hero with false beliefs? What if the mentor genuinely hates the Hero but is still on Team Good Guys?
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sex is fine but have you ever thought about all the ways you’d rewrite a flawed piece of media that shaped your life and holds a special place in your heart despite its unfulfilled potential
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SHAKESPEARE TRIO but candy-ified!!!! and. assassin's creeded
(romeo and juliet are themed after valentines candies, mercutio is themed after halloween)
AND MERCUTIO SPEEDPAINT !!!! i actually forgot to stop it after lineart lol so the colors were also recorded by chance
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Wastelander Zenyatta and Ramattra by eweeppy
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