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Using Jungian Personality Types to Develop Characters in Fiction: Guest Post, by Darby Larson

A few years ago I became fascinated with the Myers-Briggs Type Indicator and read all the profiles I could find online for all the different types. After learning my own type (INTP), I found I had the ability to type my family and friends. When I meet people now, I instinctively want to type them, to understand them. What I’ve learned is that people who have characteristics I despise end up also having characteristics that I envy, and I’ve gained a sense that there is a balance of good and evil in everybody.

Admittedly, my own fiction has always had a tendency to stray off the character-driven path in search of other things, but acknowledging this (as a?) flaw led me to search for different ways to develop my characters. All my characters tend to be me, my personality, not talking very much, or only when necessary. I’m not the kind of person to ramble in conversation. So I asked me, who are other people? What are they like? How do I write from inside their heads?

One day I took two random and opposite types, INFJ and ESTP, and threw them in a stuck elevator. I found that I instantly cared deeply about these characters, more than any other character I’d written. Before writing anything, I saw exactly where their conflict was and what they needed to do to resolve it or not resolve it. The potential for story exploded. I ended up not writing anything because it was such a new way of looking at writing for me. I still, and probably always will, prefer to search for content and structure in fiction outside of that which we’re accustomed to reading and experiencing (i.e., outside of people’s heads), but I’ll probably take another at crack this kind of exercise in the future.

Anyone ever tried using established personality traits to develop characters in their fiction? What was your experience?

Darby Larson is the editor of Abjective.

6 thoughts on “Using Jungian Personality Types to Develop Characters in Fiction: Guest Post, by Darby Larson

  1. Hey John, thanks for posting this!

    Did he? I’ve never heard anyone mention it before w/r/t writing. Would be interested to see that interview if it exists.

    1. Okay, I was off. It wasn’t Myers-Briggs, it was DSM-IV-TR Case Studies: A Clinical Guide to Differential Diagnosis, and it was in reference to John Haskell’s fiction:

      Take this paragraph in Haskell’s story, “The Faces of Joan of Arc.”

      Hedy Lamarr, through most of the movie, takes the side of those in authority, which is not the same as having authority. Obedience is a way of reconciling oneself to a lack of authority or a lack of choice. But it’s not the only way.

      This is a funny (read: not-so-funny) way to start a section in a story, but this is Haskell in his psychological mode, and it’s a tone he turns to frequently, which can make parts of this book sound eerily similar to the DSM-IV-TR Case Studies: A Clinical Guide to Differential Diagnosis.

      1. ah. interesting. yeah, guess that is kind of a pitfall. don’t want your narrator to start sounding like a psychologist.

  2. According to Steve Tomasula, Chris Sorrentino used the Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory to structure one section of his first book Sound on Sound.

  3. I get intermittently obsessed with the MBTI. I find myself using it to type folks giving feedback in workshop settings more often than characters. Like, “of course that didn’t work for you because you’re not an ‘I’ or ‘F,’ you’re like totally literal and rational.”

    Probably a defensive reaction.

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