Tarot

The Hero’s Journey and the Tarot Major Arcana

Christopher Vogler literally wrote the book on the Hero’s Journey—with lots of help from the Myths of several cultures and Joseph Campbell. The Writer’s Journey gives the recipe for recreating this universal and timeless tale. His ingredients are a list of stages in the journey (pieces that must appear in the plot line) and a list of archetypes (character types that are necessary to drive the plot). Put ‘em together and, “bippity, boppity, boo”, you’ve got a story!

The Stages of the Hero’s Journey
1. The Ordinary World
2. The Call to Adventure
3. Refusal of the Call
4. Meeting with the Mentor
5. Crossing the First Threshold
6. Tests, Allies, Enemies
7. Approach to the Inmost Cave
8. Ordeal
9. Reward (Seizing the sword)
10. The Road Back
11. Resurrection
12. Return with the Elixer

The Archetypes
Hero
Mentor
Threshold Guardian
Herald
Shapeshifter
Shadow
Ally
Trickster

So, I got about this far in telling my Nearest and Dearest what the next blog was going to be about and he went ballistic. Way shortened version: “I hate it when people insist on taking a beautiful thing and breaking it down into its parts. It takes away the mystery and totally ruins it. A thing is more than the sum of its parts! Can’t you just leave it alone and enjoy it?”

Of course you can. A deep understanding and appreciation of this story arc is hardwired into the psyche of every culture on earth. This is the basic plot line of most of western literature. But that’s also why it’s so important for a storyteller to know how to tell it. Unfortunately, following Vogler’s recipe doesn’t guarantee a great story—you’ve still gotta be a great storyteller—but it really, really helps.

The Archetypes and challenges of the Tarot Major Arcana also tell the story of the Hero’s Journey; and they do it in order—starting with The Fool and ending with The World. In my book, The Remaking of Molly Adair , each chapter is a tarot key. In a tarot reading, the Major Arcana cards that come up, combined with the accompanying pip and court cards, tell the reader where the querent is in his or her own Hero’s Journey. And, yes, we are all heroes and we are all on a journey—it’s called life. Each lifetime may be a series of Hero’s Journeys or it may be the same journey repeated ad nauseam until it’s done right.

My game plan is to give a bit more information about the list of stages in the journey and the list of archetypes. Then I’ll explore the meanings of each Major Arcana card and suggest where it fits on the story arc and which of Vogler’s archetypes it might represent.

Credit: The second image is one of Lady Freida Harris‘s drafts of The Fool.

6 thoughts on “The Hero’s Journey and the Tarot Major Arcana

  1. Heh. Yeah, I understand his rant and share it, to a large degree.

    Many years ago (35?), I was a research assistant for a doctoral candidate in Church History. My conclusion after reading many thousands of pages of stuff that could put an insomniac to sleep was, Theology Is The Death Of Experience.

    In other words, attempting to define the Divine makes it absolutely certain that you will no longer be able to experience Her.

    But… There seems to be something within us that drives us to try to explain what we do not understand. And that explanation is not the same thing as a definition. And studying technique so that we understand the pattern is not the same thing as blindly following a set formula. We can’t bend/break the rules if we don’t know what they are.

    It’s a fine line, isn’t it?

  2. Greetings,

    Our culture hides the path with heart. Your using the Tarot to illustrate one is needed for us all, young and older both, to give us a chance to put our best foot forward by giving a map within the story. I look forward to more.

    1. You make an important point. The Hero’s Journey is the path of the heart, and when we ignore that path, we often sacrifice not only our health, but also our joy. Both the Hero’s journey and the Tarot are remarkably effective tools that our culture has developed to help us find our heart paths.

  3. Our culture hides the path with heart, the sacred calling. I look forward to reading your book that gives a map within the story. Good writing to you.

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