Applying Jungian Psychology to Fiction and Screenwriting: The Beebe Model of Character Architecture
Read the complete series on Depth Psychology in Writing:
- Part 1: The Villain With a Thousand Faces
- Part 2: Using Jungian Psychotherapy in Screenwriting
- Part 3: Personality Theories and Character Creation
Most character development advice given to novelists and screenwriters is utterly superficial. Writers are told to give their protagonists a “flaw,” a “want,” and a “need.” While this creates functional plot mechanics, it rarely generates the kind of deep, resonant psychological authenticity that makes a character feel alive. When characters feel flat on the page, it is because their psychological architecture lacks an unconscious mind.
In my interviews with working screenwriters on the Taproot Therapy Collective Podcast, we consistently arrive at the same realization: to create characters that behave like real human beings—especially under the extreme stress of a narrative climax—writers must understand the structural anatomy of the psyche. This requires moving beyond surface-level tropes and utilizing Jungian depth psychology, specifically Dr. John Beebe’s Eight-Function Model, as an indispensable tool for narrative architecture.
The Conscious Spine: Constructing Act I and the Ego-Syntonic Defense
Many writers attempt to use the Myers-Briggs Type Indicator (MBTI) to sketch out characters, assigning a four-letter code to dictate behavior. But standard MBTI is merely a sorting mechanism for conscious preferences; it does not explain why a character sabotages themselves, or what happens when they undergo total psychological collapse. Dr. John Beebe expanded upon Jung’s original cognitive functions by tying them directly to specific archetypal energies. We do not just “use” a cognitive function; we use it through the lens of an archetype.
In the first act of your screenplay, your protagonist relies on their ego-syntonic functions—the parts of their personality they actively identify with. This is their survival strategy. Their primary interface with the world is the Hero Archetype. As we explore deeply in our clinical breakdown of The Hero’s Journey in Psychotherapy, the protagonist’s dominant function is highly developed and entirely trusted. It is the blunt instrument they use to solve the inciting incident.
However, over-reliance on this Hero function creates the protagonist’s fatal blind spot. A character cannot defeat the ultimate antagonist using their dominant function alone; if they could, the narrative would resolve in ten pages. The ego must be dismantled.
Supporting this dominant trait is the Auxiliary “Good Parent” function, which dictates how the character nurtures others and projects stability, and the Tertiary “Puer Aeternus” (Eternal Child) function. The Eternal Child is the site of the character’s creativity, but also their deepest vulnerability. If you want to write a scene that generates immediate, highly authentic interpersonal conflict, have a supporting character criticize the protagonist’s Tertiary function. The protagonist will instantly regress into childish, volatile defensiveness.
The Midpoint: Crossing the Threshold of the Anima/Animus
The turning point of any great narrative requires the protagonist to face the bridge to their own unconscious mind: the Inferior Function. In the Beebe model, this function is governed by the contra-sexual archetype—the Jungian Anima and Animus.
The Inferior function operates with a sense of “all-or-nothing” dread. It represents the character’s deepest insecurity and their greatest source of shame. In screenwriting, the “Ordeal” at the midpoint of the story must force the protagonist into a scenario where their dominant Hero function is rendered completely useless, leaving them with no choice but to engage their Anima or Animus. This is terrifying for the ego. To survive the narrative, the character must integrate this suppressed, opposite energy, effectively bridging their conscious ego with their unconscious potential. Failure to do so leads directly to the tragedy of Act III.
The “All Is Lost” Moment: Eruption of the Jungian Shadow
As discussed with the screenwriters on our podcast, the hardest part of writing a script is the “All Is Lost” moment. Writers often struggle to make the protagonist’s breakdown feel earned rather than forced by the plot. Real people do not just arbitrarily make bad decisions when stressed; they regress into highly predictable, archetypal defense mechanisms.
When the protagonist is pushed past their breaking point and the conscious ego fails, the bottom four functions—the Jungian Shadow—violently take over. These are ego-dystonic energies. The character begins to act completely out of character, driven by autonomous forces they cannot control.
First to emerge is the Opposing Personality (Nemesis), a paranoid, passive-aggressive defense mechanism. When the protagonist suddenly turns on their mentor or best friend midway through the story, projecting bad intentions onto their allies, they are operating from the Nemesis archetype. If the pressure continues, the character devolves into the Senex or Witch (Critical Parent). Instead of nurturing, they become cold, authoritarian, and utterly unforgiving, alienating their remaining allies by demanding impossible perfection to regain a sense of control.
The Climax: The Trickster and the Demon
When the character is backed into an inescapable double-bind, the narrative demands chaos to break the stalemate. This is the domain of the Trickster. As we see in the Odysseus Trickster Archetype, this energy is boundary-dissolving and completely amoral. When your protagonist suddenly does something wildly unpredictable, self-destructive, and seemingly nonsensical to escape a trap, the Trickster has taken the wheel. The Trickster protects the ego by burning the rules of the world to the ground.
Finally, at the absolute climax of the story, the character faces the threat of total psychological annihilation. This triggers the eighth and most deeply buried function: the Demon / Daimon. It represents the character’s concept of pure evil, but simultaneously holds the potential for profound, transformative redemption (the Daimon). In this final confrontation, the character faces a binary choice: they either surrender to the Demon to destroy the antagonist (risking their own soul, undergoing enantiodromia, and becoming the villain themselves), or they integrate this dark energy, achieving a transcendent psychological wholeness that allows them to overcome the final obstacle.
Applying the Beebe Model to Thematic World-Building
The Eight-Function model is not limited to individual character psychology; it serves as a robust cosmological framework for macro-level world-building. In speculative fiction, sci-fi, and fantasy, the external political world is often a macroscopic projection of the protagonist’s internal psychological state.
The prevailing society, government, or ethos of your fictional world usually operates on the protagonist’s Dominant function—it is ordered, accepted, and structurally sound (The Empire). The unexplored territories, forbidden zones, or the repressed underclass represent the Anima/Animus—the place the protagonist is terrified to enter but holds the key to saving the world. Finally, the chaotic, rule-breaking elements of your world (the smugglers, hackers, or rebel factions) perfectly embody the Trickster archetype, forcing the rigid dominant society to either adapt or face total collapse.
By utilizing Dr. John Beebe’s model, you cease writing characters who simply react to plot points. Instead, you construct fully realized, dynamic psychological entities whose inevitable breakdowns and transcendent integrations will drive your narrative forward with terrifying, beautiful authenticity.
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