- Antihero
In
fiction , an antihero [Spelled as a single word, without hyphen, per [http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/antihero Merriam-Webster Online] ; [http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/antihero Dictionary.com Unabridged (v 1.1)] , based on the "Random House Unabridged Dictionary", 2006; and [http://www.bartleby.com/61/7/A0340700.html "The American Heritage" Dictionary of the English Language", Fourth Edition, 2000] ] is aprotagonist whose character and goals are antithetical to classical heroism.The term dates to 1714. ["Merriam-Webster's Collegiate Dictionary", Tenth Edition, 1994, p. 51, and [http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/antihero Merriam-Webster Online] ]
History
There is no definitive moment when the antihero came into existence as a literary trope.
Apollonius of Rhodes ' "Argonautica" portraysJason as a timid, passive, indecisive man that contrasts sharply with other Greek heroes. [cite journal| author=Haggar, Daley| title=Review of "Infinite Jest"| journal=Harvard Advocate| year=1996| volume=Fall 96] The antihero has evolved over time, changing as society's conceptions of the hero changed, from the Elizabethan times ofChristopher Marlowe 's "Faust" andWilliam Shakespeare 'sFalstaff , to the darker-themedVictorian literature of the 19th century, such asJohn Gay 's "The Beggar's Opera " orPhilip Meadows Taylor 's "Confessions of a Thug". TheByronic hero also sets a literary precedent for the modern concept of the antihero.Contemporary literature
In modern times, heroes have enjoyed an increased moral complexity. Mid-20th century playwrights such as
Samuel Beckett andTom Stoppard showcased anti-heroicprotagonist s recognizable by their lack of identity and determination. Pulp fiction and noir detective stories of the mid-20th century saw characters such asSam Spade , who lacked the glorious appeal of previous heroic figures, become popular. Influenced by the pulps, earlycomic book s featured anti-heroic characters such asBatman (whose shadowy nature contrasted with their openly "heroic" peers likeSuperman ) andSub-Mariner (who would just as soon conquerhumanity as try to save it). [ [http://goodcomics.comicbookresources.com/2007/07/30/365-reasons-to-love-comics-211/ Comics Should Be Good! » 365 Reasons to Love Comics #211 ] ] Marvel's most prolific anti-hero is perhaps The Punisher, who is more than willing to kill those who he views as deserving of death.Sergio Leone 's "spaghetti westerns " showcased a wanderingvigilante (the "Man with No Name " played byClint Eastwood ) whose gruff demeanor clashed with other heroic characteristics. Fact|date=August 2007Many modern antiheroes possess, or even encapsulate, the
postmodern rejection of traditional values symptomatic ofModernist literature in general, as well as the disillusion felt afterWorld War II and the Nuclear Age. It has been argued that the continuing popularity of the antihero in modern literature and popular culture may be based on the recognition that a person is fraught with human frailties, unlike the archetypes of the white-hatted cowboy and the noble warrior, and is therefore more accessible to readers and viewers. This popularity may also be symptomatic of the rejection by theavant-garde of traditional values after thecounter-culture revolution of the 1960s. [cite journal| author=Erickson, Leslie| title=The Search for Self: Everyday Heroes and an Integral Re-Visioning of the Heroic Journey in Postmodern Literature and Popular Culture | journal=Ph.D Dissertation| year=2004| volume=University of Nebraska] In the postmodern era, traditionally defined heroic qualities, akin to the classic "knight in shining armor" type, have given way to the "gritty truth" of life, and authority in general is being questioned. The broodingvigilante or "noble criminal" archetype seen in characters like Batman is slowly becoming part of the popular conception of heroic valor rather than being characteristics that are deemed un-heroic. [cite journal| author=Lawall G,| title=Apollonius' Argonautica. Jason as anti-hero| journal=Yale Classical Studies| year=1966| volume=19| pages= 119–169]See also
*
Antivillain
*Antagonist
*Byronic hero
* Tragic flaw
*List of fictional anti-heroes
*Tragic hero
* Tweener, a similar type of character in professional wrestling
*Vigilante Notes
References
* [http://www.nobel.se/literature/laureates/1976/presentation-speech.html Nobel e-Museum: The Nobel Prize in Literature 1976 Presentation Speech by Karl Ragnar Gierow]
* [http://www.galegroup.com/free_resources/glossary/ Thomson Gale e-research and educational publishing:Glossary A]External links
* [http://archive.salon.com/books/bag/2000/05/15/begley/index.html Salon.com: Anti-heroes (May 15, 2000)]
* [http://www.flowerstorm.net/disa/Gallery/anti-explain.html The Gallery of Anti-heroes and Villains: What is an Anti-Hero?]
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