Hero’s Journey: Sir Gawain and Thomas Becket

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Every hero goes through multiple stages accompanying many obstacles on his or her journey. Although the journeys may differ in detail, structurally, they resemble a sound format. Along the designed adventures, the heroes come into contact with characters that possess fixed personalities or “archetypes.” The stages and archetypes of stories are somewhat predictable, but may take shape in peculiar forms. Both exemplifying heroic characteristics, Sir Gawain from Sir Gawain and the Green Knight by J.R.R. Tolkien and Thomas Becket from Murder in the Cathedral by T.S. Eliot structurally go on the same archetypical journey, but diverge in the lessons they learn and where the characters start and end in their journeys.
As could be foreseen, Sir Gawain’s and Thomas Becket’s journeys converge into the molded pattern of the Hero’s Journey. First and foremost, they respond to the “Call to Adventure.” Gawain rises up to take the Green Knight’s challenge from King Arthur’s hands (Tolkien 36). Thomas Becket accepts his fate while preaching in the Cathedral on Christmas morning: “…I do not think I...

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