A hero ventures forth from the world of common day into a region of supernatural wonder: fabulous forces are there encountered and a decisive victory is won. The hero comes back from this mysterious adventure with the power to bestow boons on his fellow man. That’s called a monomyth or more commonly known as the ‘Heroic Journey’ a form or archetypal theory. Game of Thrones follows the heroic journey model, well in some areas. If you were to analyse each and every character you would find that a lot don’t follow the heroic journey model. But it does for Jon Snow. Jon was born a bastard. His whole life he felt an outcast. Jon’s heroic journey begins with a call to adventure. Jon leaves his home and family to join the night’s watch, an ancient military order that guard the realm from threats beyond the wall. Jon is looked down on where he lives because he is a bastard, in the nights watch everyman is equal. Jon believes he will find purpose and meaning in his life there. The archetypal theory monomyth follows Jon through his journey in the nights watch. Though Jon’s mentor isn’t a traditional mentor, it’s himself. After his refusal of the call where he tries to escape from the nights watch to join his half brother who is waging war, Jon brings himself back to the watch. It is his loyalty to his fellow comrades that brings him back. Jon feels sense of friendship and belonging at the wall. Although he wants to help his brother Jon believes he has a purpose at the wall. Jon is his own mentor here. It is his doing that brings him back to the wall. After mentoring himself to stay at the wall Jon enters the special world by crossing the threshold into the unknown of the other side of the wall. Jon’s heroic journey is tested when after capture he must kill one of his own to gain his enemies trust. This is where Jon is most conflicted in his journey. Could he kill a member of the nights watch to become a
A hero ventures forth from the world of common day into a region of supernatural wonder: fabulous forces are there encountered and a decisive victory is won. The hero comes back from this mysterious adventure with the power to bestow boons on his fellow man. That’s called a monomyth or more commonly known as the ‘Heroic Journey’ a form or archetypal theory. Game of Thrones follows the heroic journey model, well in some areas. If you were to analyse each and every character you would find that a lot don’t follow the heroic journey model. But it does for Jon Snow. Jon was born a bastard. His whole life he felt an outcast. Jon’s heroic journey begins with a call to adventure. Jon leaves his home and family to join the night’s watch, an ancient military order that guard the realm from threats beyond the wall. Jon is looked down on where he lives because he is a bastard, in the nights watch everyman is equal. Jon believes he will find purpose and meaning in his life there. The archetypal theory monomyth follows Jon through his journey in the nights watch. Though Jon’s mentor isn’t a traditional mentor, it’s himself. After his refusal of the call where he tries to escape from the nights watch to join his half brother who is waging war, Jon brings himself back to the watch. It is his loyalty to his fellow comrades that brings him back. Jon feels sense of friendship and belonging at the wall. Although he wants to help his brother Jon believes he has a purpose at the wall. Jon is his own mentor here. It is his doing that brings him back to the wall. After mentoring himself to stay at the wall Jon enters the special world by crossing the threshold into the unknown of the other side of the wall. Jon’s heroic journey is tested when after capture he must kill one of his own to gain his enemies trust. This is where Jon is most conflicted in his journey. Could he kill a member of the nights watch to become a