Light at the tunnel's end: the archetypal patterns of journey in eugence o'neill's plays
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Abstract
This research examines the archetypal patterns of journey in Eugene O’Neill’s plays.
Themythical-legendarystoriesuse this pattern, which has continuedshaping the way humans
tell stories even in modern time.In O’Neill’s plays, the protagonists pass through the
multifaceted life-situations on the surface; behind the seeming varieties of their evolution,
however, there exists an archetypal pattern. O’Neill’s characters accomplish their journey
going throughthis pattern; the journey transforms them into the bringers of spiritual awakening
and elevates them as martyrs.
This study introduces the archetypal concepts of thinkers like Sir James Frazer, Maud
Bodkin, Northrop Frye, Carl G. Jung, Joseph Campbell, DavidHartman and Diane Zimberoff,
and Conor Neill. It specifically synthesizes the individuation process of Jung with the journey
pattern of Campbell to examine the spiritual transformation of archetypal personalities. The
research thinly parallels the pattern of life-course O’Neill’s characters cover with the one of
Neill’s personalities. It presents the characteristic traits which help categorize a specific O’Neill
protagonistas oneof Neill’s spiritual characters, and then goes on detailing the life-adventures
of that particular O’Neill protagonist to observe how he/she gets transformed into enlightened
being.
The research proceeds trying to find answers to the questions as to what O’Neill
portrays in his plays, how his protagonists are characterized and why their transformation
matters. It asserts that O’Neill’s plays portray characters whose life-course reflects the pattern
of journey which is archetypal in nature. Using the qualitative method to present a blend of
description, analysis and interpretation of O’Neill’s protagonists’ journey, the study establishes
that O’Neill’scharacters begin life enthusiastically. The enthusiasm breaks soon, and forces
them to face ordeals, from which they come out triumphant. Theyaccomplish the journey, in
which the interaction between their conscious and unconscious life transforms them into what
Neill calls the Explorer, the Innocent and the Sage. Their transformation matters because it is
how O’Neill justifies the ways of life and death of modern individuals.
O’Neill has been studied for his dramatic progression, the notions of the archetype and
the gothic, rudimentary human needs, his growth as a dramatist, his representation of human
characters, the problem of the hero’s expedition and renovation, and the influence of the dead
in the living characters. He is also approached from the cultural materialistic perspective.
However, scholars or researchershave not studied O’Neill with an exclusive focus on the issue
of archetypal journey and spiritual transformationso far. The study attempts to see spiritual
meaning behind suffering and miseries, claiming that such ventures open a new way of looking
at suffering and miseries in O’Neill’s character-portrayals.
The research has selected sixteen characters from O’Neill’s six plays picked up from his
three periods. The characters are grouped as per their conscious and unconscious orientations.
Consciously, the characters in the early plays are the neophytes, in the middle the obstinate and
in the late the disillusioned. Unconsciously, they are, and move towards becoming, the
Explorer, the Innocent and the Sage. The study uses the common sense approach‒literal
denotation as given in the dictionary‒to justify the grouping of characters into the conscious
attitude types. It establishes them as a specific archetypal personality describing the stages of
their journey as described by Campbell and Hartman and Zimberoff.
