archetype mythology boundarysplittingpath transformcompete transformation generic

The Trickster

archetype

Source: MythologySocial Roles

Categories: cognitive-scienceorganizational-behaviorarts-and-culturemythology-and-religion

Transfers

Every functioning system needs someone willing to break the rules. The Trickster is a cross-cultural archetype: Loki, Coyote, Hermes, Anansi, Bart Simpson, the court jester. Its consistency across unrelated mythologies reveals that this isn’t a character but a role that systems generate out of necessity.

Key structural parallels:

Limits

Expressions

Origin Story

The trickster appears in nearly every mythology studied with rigor. Jung identified it as a universal archetype in On the Psychology of the Trickster Figure (1954), connecting it to the shadow and the undifferentiated psyche. The definitive modern treatment is Lewis Hyde’s Trickster Makes This World (1998), which traces the figure from Hermes and Coyote through modern artists like Marcel Duchamp and John Cage, whose rule-breaking created the new rules everyone else followed.

The engineering applications are recent and mostly informal. Netflix’s Chaos Monkey (2011) is the purest institutional trickster: a program whose purpose is to break production so production learns to survive breaking.

References

Structural Neighbors

Entries from different domains that share structural shape. Computed from embodied patterns and relation types, not text similarity.

Structural Tags

Patterns: boundarysplittingpath

Relations: transformcompete

Structure: transformation Level: generic

Contributors: fshot