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The Shattered Tiara: Deconstructing the Archetype of the Fallen Princess in the Narrative of Lucia
The archetype of the "Fallen Princess" represents a powerful subversion of traditional fairy tale hierarchies, transforming the passive royal heroine into a figure of tragic agency. This paper provides a complete character and narrative analysis of Lucia āa composite protagonist drawn from the fusion of classical princess tropes and modern deconstructionist fiction. Through the lens of Jungian archetypes, feminist literary criticism, and tragic narrative theory, this study examines Luciaās trajectory from gilded innocence to catastrophic ruin, and finally to a state of ambiguous resurrection. The paper argues that Luciaās āfallā is not merely a loss of status but a necessary deconstruction of the idealised feminine, ultimately redefining power as the acceptance of moral and psychological complexity. fallen princess lucia
Fallen Princess, Lucia, Archetype, Tragedy, Feminist Literary Criticism, Narrative Deconstruction, Liminality. 1. Introduction The canonical princessābeautiful, virtuous, and waitingāhas long served as a vessel for societal hopes of order and transcendence. However, contemporary and Gothic literary traditions have increasingly dismantled this figure, giving rise to the āFallen Princessā: a woman of royal birth who has lost her throne, her innocence, or her moral clarity. No character embodies this archetype more profoundly than Lucia . The Shattered Tiara: Deconstructing the Archetype of the
Institute of Comparative Literature and Archetypal Studies The paper argues that Luciaās āfallā is not