Thoughts, Feelings, Ideas...

Thursday, May 19, 2022

The God-Man Archetype - Writing Insights

What is the god-man archetype? There are a number of examples in fiction, from Son Goku, All-Might, Dr. Manhattan, etc. But the two I want to focus on today is: Superman from DC Comics, and the Doctor from the BBC TV series Doctor Who.

The interesting thing about this pair is that they occupy two very different takes on the god-man archetype; which is why they fascinate me, personally. But let’s back up. What characteristics make a character fit into the “god-man” mold? Here’s what I’ve observed.

1.       (1) The character must possess a great amount of power, at the very least, much greater than regular members of the society that surrounds that character.

2.      (2)  The character must possess some qualities of regular members of society, that is, being human to some degree, whether it be in physical form, personality, or limitations.

So let’s take Superman, for example, first. We all know his story. He is the last son of Krypton, sent to Earth by scientist parents to avoid the coming destruction of their home planet. When Superman, then known as Kal-El, lands on Earth, he comes into the care of kindly Kansas couple Martha and Jonathan Kent. They teach him strong, traditional moral values of right and wrong, and the boy grows up to become Clark Kent in Smallville. Eventually, his powers emerge – granted to him by the combination of Earth’s yellow sun’s radiation and his own alien biochemistry. After learning to control his powers, he moves to Metropolis and takes on the identity of Superman to save people in need – all the while working at the Daily Planet newspaper as a normal human reporter.

Superman embodies the first quality of the god-man archetype quite handily. He is quite possibly the strongest character in the entire DC universe. There are very few who can match him in a one-on-one fight. Even when the character famously “died” in the 1990s in his fight against the supervillain Doomsday, it was later revealed that he had simply gone into a “healing coma” and was resurrected a few years later – casting doubt as to whether the do-gooder Kryptonian could actually die at all.

As for the second quality, Clark Kent couldn’t be more human. He’s shy around his crush and later wife Lois Lane, he’s a country farm boy from Kansas, he likes going to baseball games, he loves his mom, and he makes friends with the office dork Jimmy Olsen. He’s good ol’ Clark Kent.  He looks like a human, he acts like a human, and he’s limited by human compassion and emotions.

At first glance, the Doctor from Doctor Who seems quite similar to the Man of Steel from DC Comics. The Doctor, too, is an alien from another world – Gallifrey. He too, is away from his home planet (sometimes due to exile, sometime by choice, and sometimes due to tragedy depending on which era of the show). He also, has an affinity for planet Earth, and regularly saves humanity. And like Superman, he is seemingly unable to die. The Doctor’s species allow for full cellular regeneration when he is close to death, retaining his memories, but completely rewriting his DNA and personality based on his subconscious. But that’s where the similarities end.

For the first quality of the god-man archetype – great power – the Doctor’s power isn’t in his strength, and it’s in his intelligence and encyclopedic knowledge of various alien worlds and species. He is nearly as fragile as the humans he looks like (although he would argue that humans look like his species – the Time Lords). A spray of bullets would put him down as easy as you or me (and it has). But the Doctor continually gets out of danger and saves the day through his cleverness and quick thinking, rarely even depending on his time machine, the TARDIS, to do so. He’s faced armies, monsters, and the end of the universe itself on numerous occasions only to emerge victorious with little more than quick talking, knowledge of alien science, and maybe a futuristic screwdriver. His intelligence, while not as imposing as Superman’s strength, is quite godlike (at least, in the classical Greek sense).

As for the second quality – having the qualities of regular humans – we’ve already mentioned his fragile mortality (in a sense, anyway), but it’s also his lack of strength. While he is extremely intelligent, he is not much greater in any other aspect than the multitudes of alien species. In fact, he would rank quite below average in his own universe. He may be more capable than a regular human, but he’s usually the underdog anywhere else in the universe. And that makes him relatable. He’s just as vulnerable out in space as we are on our own planet. And yet he risks his lives to save worlds and species anyway. He suffers from similar limitations as us, and yet he attempts to save everyone anyway.

So what makes the Big Blue Boy Scout and the Madman with a Box so different, then? Why did I say earlier that they occupy vastly different takes on the god-man archetype?

It’s simply this: Superman is a regular man with the power of a god. The Doctor is a god with the power of a human. Allow me to elaborate.

Superman is an aspirational character, someone to look up to. He’s relatable and human like us, and through his adventures, he shows us what we as humans should do with power.

The Doctor is a realistic character, in a sense. He’s an alien with a far-off perspective on humanity, forced to work within our limitations. He makes mistakes, sometimes horrifying ones. He’s a realistic look at what someone with that much power trying their best to do the right thing can look like.

Superman gives us space to make our own decisions, knowing he could fix everything, but respects us too much to become a dictator, instead opting to come alongside us and help us as a man.

The Doctor frequently has to make tough decisions on how best to save us, because he can’t fix everything. He’s not trying to be a god (most of the time), but he sometimes makes decisions that he may not have the right to make.

So when you make a character who embodies the god-man archetype, you have a choice. Does your character resemble a loving, benevolent god that is relatable to other men, or is he a flawed man with just enough godlike power to make him dangerous? Either is valid depending on the story you want to tell, and I am sure there are more variations.

The thing that binds both types of god-man characters, however, is this: whoever the god-man chooses to be, good or evil or some attempt in between, it’s going to change the lives of everyone around him.

Wednesday, January 19, 2022

Mirror

 You won't talk to me

Won't even look at me

Punished for daring to rock the boat

Cut deeply for not bowing to your gods

Since when did you use my weapons against me?


Because when I even approach

When I even indicate

That I might disagree with you

Your shields go up

And I am the enemy

Who cannot be reasoned with and must be fought

And I hate it


The same disease that wracks your bones infects my marrow

Am I any better?

Are we two strands of the same sickness?


Maybe the truth is that we're two sides of the same coin

Maybe we're both letting pride drive us away from the ones we love


And maybe I don't care

Maybe there's a part of me that would rather be right than see you again

And maybe I don't know

Maybe I know there's something wrong but I have no idea how it got this way

And maybe I should let go like you said

Swallow the bitter medicine that we'll never have what we once did

I hate that

But I don't hate you


But I'll never pay the price to have a half-baked solution

It's everything

Or nothing at all

The truth is that everything was never whole

I lied to myself to paint a beautiful picture over an ugly reality

I tried tearing down that facade

Only to find pain

Maybe the lie was better


Because the truth is that you were never happy unless you were on the move

And I was happier the slower my pace became

The truth is that you could only be happy if your dreams came true exactly as you demanded

And I could only be happy when I lied to myself that I never wanted my dreams in the first place

Maybe we're more alike than either of us would care to admit

And I hate that