Hermann Hesse’s Narcissus and Goldmund (1930): A Jungian Archetypal Analysis
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University of Tlemcen
Abstract
Hermann Hesse is known for his profound exploration of the complexities of the
human mind and life, which makes his literary works apt for insightful psychological
readings. A Jungian archetypal analysis of Hesse’s Narcissus and Goldmund reveals
that Jungian ideas and concepts shape and drive the story. Jung’s model of the psyche
and his theories of the unconscious, opposites, functions, archetypes, and
individuation are applied to demonstrate that the two protagonists of the novel,
Narcissus and Goldmund, represent opposite tendencies in the psyche: thinking
against feeling, spiritual against material, consciousness against unconscious, and
masculine against feminine. Each one of them undergoes a process of wholeness
through which they develop their superior functions and integrate different aspects of
their psyche, growing more psychologically balanced. Archetypes, the universal
psychic patterns of human experience, have a central function in the novel as they
guide the psychological development of the characters. Hesse exalts art and uses it as
the means through which the opposites are unified; it is the way Goldmund comes in
touch with the self, the ultimate goal of individuation.