Showing posts with label puer aeternus. Show all posts
Showing posts with label puer aeternus. Show all posts

Friday, April 19, 2013

Researching Extended Adolescence: Searching for Mature Reflection on Immaturity

Hey everyone!
Today we are back in action, researching the extended adolescence phenomenon...or at least we are trying to.

We are looking for articles online about extended adolescence, and Jen’s first instinct was to check academic journals. But it looks like so far, the phenomenon has been written about more it in the media than academically. So, we shifted gears in our research to media-based resources.

Many resources we found are news articles talking about current trends and some self-help or “beware of” guides. Many of these so far contain facts we were generally already aware of, but were looking for outside sources and speculation and perhaps even statistics on.  There are a few sources, however, that are looking at it in a more sophisticated manner than we had expected.

NPR did a story that is in the vein of what were are looking for, you can read it and listen to the podcast here.  The article focuses more on how the extended adolescence phenomenon has affected boys/men than girls/women, but it is interesting and important none-the-less. In fact it applies to our paper in an interesting way because it shows the differences between Peter and Wendy are still relevant and realistic in today’s world. It also connects the EA phenomenon to some elements of daily life that we may not have determined important otherwise--such as extended life expectancy and the man’s role within a family structure.

Max also found the The Youth Cartel, which, while a faith based site and organization, they actually held an entire Extended Adolescence Symposium and created an ebook on the subject. You can see that here. We’re hoping they could be very useful.
We are curious, considering the Cartel has religious bearings, as to what their analysis and discussion of the phenomenon is as religion is noticeably absent from the page for their symposium and perhaps it is an objective look.

Another source we found is a report titled “Extended adolescence: What UK and international
research exists on extended adolescence?“, which links to a PDF of the report. This one is going to be important because it shows the research that has been done into this phenomenon on a global scale, not just in America. It will contextualize what’s going on in our country within the setting of the entire world. This particular report is extensive and it covers not only what kind of research has been done, but the conclusions which have been drawn from that research. The report is from 2012, making it a fantastic contemporary assessment of research done on this topic. This is exactly the kind of resource we will want to go over with a fine-toothed comb.

Another article, from last December, Why Millennials Aren't Growing Up seems interesting and worth exploring as it is an interview with Robin Marantz Henig and her daughter Samantha Henig, who together wrote the book Twentysomething: Why Do Young Adults Seem Stuck? following the viral success of an article Robin wrote in 2010, “What Is It About 20-Somethings?”. As an actual book on the subject, and co-written by an actual twentysomething, I feel both the above article, an interview and discussion, and the actual book could be of some use if picked over.

Apparently Viacom did a marketing report called “The Golden Age of Youth” and while we found several marketing articles about the report, we haven’t been able to locate the report itself. Viacom is of course the entertainment powerhouse that boasts both Nickelodeon and MTV among their many properties, so being able to define the “young adult” age group is critical to understanding their target demographic.

Overall, we found enough links to fill about two and a half pages. Most came from google scholar or google searching the term “Extended Adolescence.” If you have any other ideas where we can search for sources, send them our way!

Monday, February 18, 2013

Who Does This Sound Like: Peter Or The Doctor?



He is the loveliest god, who dissolves the old and brings in the new, who intoxicates, sending people out of their conscious minds with his enthusiasm, only to hang over them while they recover those faculties, to await their acknowledgement. The puer aeternus is therefore not just what is new and to come, but the very process itself by means of which the present transforms itself into something fresh – the non-mature, the chrysalis and imago itself, all within the same whole.
- Yeoman 29

Thursday, December 27, 2012

Paper Abstract, Thesis and General Outline

ABSTRACT: “Never let him see you age. He doesn't like endings” is a warning just as fitting for Amy Pond as it is for Wendy Darling. Examining seasons five through seven (2010-2012) on Doctor Who reveals many adapted myths, legends and fairy tales threaded into the Neverland of Amy and the Doctor. Amy as Wendy then transforms from child to mother, both literally and figuratively, in season six, and the Doctor seeks refuge in immaturity. Amy’s dual legacy as friend and “mother” is further developed through her daughter. A thrice-changeling, River Song begins as a Tinker Bell archetype, but develops into Wendy’s daughter Jane.
The tone drastically shifts from childlike innocence to mature subject matter; the relationship between Amy and the Doctor develops from unrequited love to a deep mutual understanding, and finally the Doctor becomes dependent on their relationship, which Amy has outgrown.
The Amy/Doctor relationship coincided with the rising popularity of Doctor Who outside of the UK. We will argue that this relationship appealed to American audiences due in part to the rise of extended adolescence. The Eleventh Doctor’s connection to the Jungian puer aeternus and “Peter Pan syndrome” provides a cathartic experience through Amy’s escapist adventures.

THESIS: The Smith/Moffat/Gillan era of Doctor Who is a modern adaptation of the Peter Pan myth in many ways. These adaptive elements are the reason that the show’s popularity has spread outside of the UK and finally reached a similarly massive level of popularity in other countries as well--particularly the United States, because of the growing phenomenon of “extended adolescence” among the show’s targeted audience.


OUTLINE

  • Moffat’s Usage of Fairytales, Myth and Archetypes and Literary Metaphor.
    • A)  Moffat's Pre-Series 5 work e.g. The Girl In The Fireplace
    • B)  Elements Moffat uses in series 5-7 e.g. Sleeping Beauty, The World Turtle, Minotaur, Pandora’s Box. 5 takes prominence.
    • C)  Amy as embodiment of literary metaphor, her own author of her existence; twice, both in The Big Bang via the crack (not intentional) and intentional at the end, telling the Doctor to dictate what stories young amy will eventually (most likely) act out as make believe as she grows up.
      • She is a literary circle like the very myths and stories she loved.
        • ["we're all stories in the end", dual audienceship of childrens' stories--that's really driven home by Amy telling her own story in a way she's a child in control of how the adult tells the story, which is huge for a children's story/show she eliminates any parental control over her life]
    • D or E) The ultimate adaptation of “Peter Pan” (very generalized, how we first came to realize this, how it has developed--season 7.1 conclusion was a real clincher for the theory.)
    • E or D)  Puer Aeternus 
      • [God Pan, Hermes--Barrie ALSO used these characters to develop Peter, so this will only be introduced here then delved more into later in section 2.]

Thursday, November 29, 2012

Sound familiar?




Puer aeternus is Latin for eternal boy, used in mythology to designate a child-god who is forever young; psychologically it is an older man whose emotional life has remained at an adolescent level. The puer typically leads a provisional life, due to the fear of being caught in a situation from which it might not be possible to escape. He covets independence and freedom, chafes at boundaries and limits, and tends to find any restriction intolerable.[1]

Notes:
^ Sharp, p. 109

Sharp, Daryl. Jung Lexicon: A Primer of Terms & Concepts. (pp 109 – 110). Inner City Books, Toronto, 1991. ISBN 0-919123-48-1

We have MANY MANY other books to purchase and or take out from the library aside from the over a dozen we currently already have and most likely WILL be using for this paper.   The subject of the puer aeternus is pretty pivitol not only for our comparisons of Eleven and Peter, whom is the poster child for the archetype,  but may explain to a degree Moffat's intentional plans for the character and how the personality change and his relationship to Amy correlates to real world issues with young adults and teenagers today moreso than ever before in the show's history.

A late-nite tidbit for the brain to nosh on. Talk again real soon! 

- Max