Jump to content

Antihero

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by CantStandYa (talk | contribs) at 00:39, 27 February 2006 (fix pov). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

In literature and film, an anti-hero is a fictional character that has some characteristics of a villain or an outsider, but is nevertheless portrayed somewhat sympathetically. In particular, an anti-hero may have enough heroic qualities and intentions to align them with the heroes in the readers' minds.

Anti-heroes can be awkward, obnoxious, passive, pitiful, obtuse, or just normal; but they are always, in some fundamental way, flawed, unqualified, or failed heroes. When the anti-hero is a central character in a work of fiction the work will frequently deal with the effect their flawed character has on the other people they meet. Additionally the work may depict how their character alters over time, either leading to punishment, un-heroic success or redemption.

History

Many modern anti-heroes possess, or even encapsulate, the rejection of traditional values symptomatic of Modernist literature in general, as well as the disillusion felt after World War II.

Previous booms in flawed heroes include: pulp fiction and noir detective stories of the mid-20th century; the darker themed victorian literature of the late 19th century; and the Elizabethan tragedies of Christopher Marlowe and William Shakespeare.

In the late 20th and early 21st century, comic books and graphic novels featured a boom of anti-hero characters (also called "dark heroes") partly as a result of two sub-genres of fiction in the late 20th century: magic realism, originating in South America and cyberpunk, originating in the United States.

Types

The vigilante

Arguably the most popular type of anti-hero is the vigilante. Usually, these are individuals with the same goals as a traditional hero, but for whom "the ends justify the means". Rather than relying on the proper legal channels, the character "takes the law into their own hands" and pursues justice in their own manner. This character type probably may owes some of its popularity to the comic book superhero.

In many works of fiction the vigilante is a law enforcement officer or other official, deepening the conflicting nature of the anti-hero.

Two well-known examples:

The developing hero

A second type of anti-hero is one who starts off possessing unlikeable traits such as prejudice, immaturity, cockiness, a single-minded focus on things such as wealth; status; or revenge or even being a criminal. As the story develops, the character grows and changes, and eventually becomes sympathetic and rises to the occasion to become heroic in every sense of the word.

Two well-known examples:

The drifter

A third type of anti-hero is one who feels helpless, distrusts conventional values and is often unable to commit to any ideals, but accepts (and often relishes) their status as an outsider. The cyberpunk, western, noir, and jidaigeki genres also make extensive use of this character-type.

Two well-known examples:

The failure

Another type of anti-hero is a character who constantly moves from one disappointment in his life to the next, without end, with only occasional and fleeting successes. But they persist and even attain a form of success through persistence and their determination to never give up or change their goals. These characters often keep a deep-seated optimism that one day they will succeed (though usually in the end they still meet with failure, the ultimate fate of a traditional villain).

Two well-known examples:

The flawed everyman

Sometimes, an anti-hero is an ordinary man or woman who completely lacks any particular heroic aspects, and also features one or two highly negative personality traits such as a large degree of greed, selfishness, cowardice or laziness. While such characters are not nearly despicable enough to be classified as villains, they lack any of the classical heroic traits such as bravery or self-sacrifice that normally distinguish heroes (even flawed heroes) from the general population. Typically, due to circumstances beyond their control, such characters are thrust into extraordinary situations that one would normally expect a traditional hero to deal with.

Such characters often behave immorally or in a cowardly fashion, and do not always have good intentions, which distinguishes them from the typical everyman or reluctant heroic characters, yet they lack the actual malice demonstrated by "villains"

Two well-known examples:

The villain

Occasionally the central character in a work has no redeeming features at all. The character seems to be a complete villain but for the fact that the story's focus is entirely upon this character and other characters are so insignificant, weak or flawed that they offer no respite. The reader or viewer is forced to sympathize or relate to a wholly unlikeable character and to directly confront their feeling for this kind of hero.

Two well-known examples:

The noble criminal

Another variation of this approach is a character who is, by traditional sensibility, a criminal, but who is actually an honorable person, exploiting people who are corrupt beyond redemption, sometimes with comic effect.

Two well-known examples of this type:

The monster

Taking this point even further is the monster as hero. Although his deeds and nature might be horrific, we can identify with his struggle against fate or injustice. Monsters and villains are not identical, however. Often a monster's external and internal nature are in conflict, allowing the monster to be both traditional hero and anti-hero.

Two well-known examples of this type:

See also

References