Dictionary Definition
persona
Noun
1 an actor's portrayal of someone in a play; "she
played the part of Desdemona" [syn: character, role, theatrical
role, part]
2 (Jungian psychology) a personal facade that one
presents to the world; "a public image is as fragile as Humpty
Dumpty" [syn: image]
[also: personae
(pl)]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Etymology
From persona, sometimes said to derive from personare.Noun
See also
External links
Italian
Related terms
Latin
Etymology
From Etruscan phersu, from Greek sc=GrekNoun
Spanish
Etymology
From personaPronunciation
- /peɾˈsona/|lang=es
Noun
Extensive Definition
A persona, in the word's everyday usage, is a
social role or a character
played by an actor. The
word derives from the Latin for "mask" or
"character", derived from the Etruscan
word "phersu", with the same meaning.
The Persona in literature
Criticism of poetry and fiction refer to a
"second self" created by the author and through whom the narrative
is related. Importantly, attributes and attitudes associated with
the persona are understood to be separate from authorial
intentions, per se, though there may in fact be some overlap
between the two. For instance, in Dostoevsky's
novel, Notes
from Underground (generally considered to be the first existentialist novel),
the narrator ought not to be conflated with Dostoevsky himself,
despite the fact that Dostoevsky and his narrator may or may not
have shared much in common. In this sense, the persona is basically
a mouthpiece for a particular worldview. Another instance of
this phenomenon can be found in Brett
Easton Ellis' novel, American
Psycho, the story of a sociopathic murderer living
in New York
City, who is a successful, if very troubled, Wall Street
executive by day. The work is one of social satire, and as such may
well reflect a good deal of authorial intention, but the persona of
Patrick
Bateman (the novel's first-person narrator) ought not to be
conflated with the novel's author.
In both of the examples just given, the persona
is an active participant in the story he is narrating — it is his
own story — but this need not be the case. To take another example
from Dostoevsky's work, the narrator of The
Brothers Karamazov is not an active participant in the story,
but nevertheless presents a clear perspective on the events
concerned therein. In other words, the invisible and omniscient
narrator of Dostoevsky's novel gives the reader the impression of
taking a definite attitude toward the proceedings being related,
albeit subtly so, and mainly by tone of description and
idiosyncratic phrasing.
Finally, the twentieth century has provided us
with many intermediate instances. One example is Faulkner's
novel As I Lay
Dying, a story told entirely via the interior
monologues of fifteen different first person narrators, and
thus from the same number of differing perspectives. Another
example of a vague or undefined relationship between narrator,
protagonist, and persona--perhaps the preeminent such example in
the English language--can be found in James Joyce's
novel, Ulysses.
Here we find instances of direct first person narration, third
person narration mixed with first person
stream of consciousness, dozens of pages of catechismic
question-and-answer, a surrealistic stageplay-like episode with
dialogue and stage directions, and finally the famous extended
first person stream of consciousness soliloquy that closes the
book. Examples such as these tend to blur or call into question the
role of a persona, at the same time as they supply rich fodder for
academic analyses of the works themselves.
To sum up, a persona can, broadly-speaking, be
understood as the "organizing consciousness" of the narrative. This
clearly differentiates it from any characters, even major and
well-developed ones, who do not steer the reader's perspective on
the proceedings. However, in some very well-defined cases, the
question might arise: Why bother positing an organizing
consciousness, understood on some level to be separate from that of
the author, at all? Different schools of criticism will have
differing answers to this question, and some — the post-structuralist
school, for instance — might take issue with the very notion of a
single organizing consciousness. But in general, the practice is
adopted as a handy way of understanding the guiding principles of a
work without treading too far into disputes about what a particular
author was "really like" or "really thought about things" in his or
her own personal life.
Charles
Dickens and William
Blake, for instance, were widely known to have progressive
attitudes regarding the difficulties faced by the working classes
in Victorian
England and the effect of England's industrial
revolution on contemporary life, respectively, and their
attitudes were clearly reflected in their work. But other cases are
not so clear-cut. Very little is known about the life of Thomas
Pynchon, but his books, in particular, Gravity's
Rainbow, have achieved iconic status in modern Western
literature. Furthermore, if the interpretation of a work is taken
to be fundamentally the process of deciphering an author's personal
feelings about various subjects — an attempt to understand the mens
auctoris (mind of the author) — then it might be argued that
literary
criticism thereby degenerates into a kind of pseudo-psychoanalysis, leaving
little room for consideration of the works themselves. Finally, and
for similar reasons, the narrator-as-persotation allows for greater
interpretive latitude, and thus arguably richer interpretive
possibilities, than a more strictly authorially-centered approach
might.
The Persona in psychology
The persona is also the mask or appearance one presents to the world. It may appear in dreams under various guises (see Carl Jung and his psychology). Importantly, the persona, used in this sense, is not a pose or some other intentional misrepresentation of the self to others. Rather, it is the self as self-construed, and may change according to situation and context.The Persona in design
As used in the design field, the Persona is an artifact that consists of a narrative relating to a desired user or customer's daily behavior patterns, using specific details, not generalities. A very popular artifact is the 'persona poster' that is usually presented in an 18 inch format with photo and text. For more details see Personas.The Persona in communication studies
In the study of communication, persona is a term given to describe the versions of self that all individuals possess. Behaviours are selected according to the desired impression an individual wishes to create when interacting with other people. Therefore, personae presented to other people vary according to the social environment the person is engaged in, in particular the persona presented before others will differ from the persona an individual will present when he/she happens to be alone.See also
persona in Czech: Persona
persona in Danish: Persona (psykologi)
persona in German: Persona
persona in Spanish: Persona
persona in French: Persona (psychanalyse)
persona in Korean: 페르소나 (심리학)
persona in Italian: Persona
persona in Polish: Persona
persona in Portuguese: Persona
persona in Serbian: Персона
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
an existence, anima, article, being, body, character, coconscious, collective
unconscious, conscience, conscious self,
creature, critter, death instinct,
ego, ego ideal, ego-id
conflict, entelechy,
entity, ethical self,
exterior, facade, face, foreconscious, front, guise, id, identity, individual, integer, item, libidinal energy, libido, life, mask, mind, module, monad, motive force, object, organism, part, person, personality, pleasure
principle, point, preconscious, primitive
self, psyche, psychic
apparatus, racial unconscious, role, self, single, singleton, something, soul, subconscious, subconscious
mind, subliminal,
subliminal self, submerged mind, superego, thing, unconscious, unconscious
mind, unit, vital
impulse