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    Megan Foxxe

    Dr. Rich

    Eng 4800

    December 2009

    [email protected]

    Somewhere Over the [Broken] Rainbow:

    Jung, the Chakras, and Elphaba in Gregory Maguires Wicked

    Of course, to hear them tell it, it is the surviving sister who is thecrazy one [. . .] What a Witch. Psychologically warped; possessed

    by demons. Insane. Not a pretty picture.

    ~The Cowardly LionGREGORY MAGUIRE, WickedPrologue

    WHAT A WICKEDIDEA

    She was raised a missionary child. She came from a prominent, powerful family, and

    was first in line to inherit its authority. She was an activist for rights of the persecuted. She

    lived silently as a holy woman and nursed the sick and dying for nearly a decade. And, she

    became a legend after her death. Now, conjure up an image of a witch in your head. Chances

    are, you imagined images similar to the ones associated with the Hollywood version of the

    Wicked Witch of the West: green skin, prominent facial features, black hat and cape, magic

    broom, perhaps even accompanied by some flying monkeys. The images associated with a witch

    are naturally opposed to the images of the first woman described above. Paradoxically, all of the

    previous statements, applicable to a Mother Theresa, can be used to describe Elphaba from

    Gregory Maguires novel Wicked: Life and Times of the Wicked Witch of the West. How can this

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    be? Chakra development and the role of the unconscious can explain the evolution of Elphabas

    image and the persona of the Wicked Witch of the West.

    Wickedis Maguires modern interpretation of L. Frank Baums well known bookThe

    Wonderful Wizard of Oz; more specifically, it is the detailed life of Baums antagonist, the

    Wicked Witch of the West. Maguire has taken, for arguments sake, an archetypal identity and

    deconstructed it. He created a rogue character who is sympathetic and misunderstood. The

    seven chakras and Jungs matrix of energetic qualities parallel the structure of the novel.

    Analyzing different trauma and power struggles throughout Elphabas life enlightens readers,

    rationalizing her actions and reactions. These analytic categories will enable us to account for

    the evolution of Elphabas character.

    Chakras: The Personal Rainbow

    What exactly is a chakra? Anodea Judith, author ofEastern Body, Western Mind:

    Psychology and the Chakra System as a Path to the Self, describes chakras like feelings or

    ideas, they cannot be held like a physical object, yet they have a strong effect upon the body (5).

    She continues to say, Chakra patterns are programmed deep in the core of the mind-body

    interface and have a strong relationship with our physical functioning (5). There are seven

    chakras aligned with the spine. Journey into the Consciousness: The Chakras, Tantra and

    Jungian Psychology, written by Charles Breaux, literally defines a chakra, and explains how this

    energy can impact the body so intensely:

    The Sanskrit word chakra means wheel [. . .] The chakras translate

    communication from all levels of the psyche into electrochemical stimuli of the

    nervous system and endocrine glands. [. . . They] therefore encompass the entire

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    spectrum of the consciousness, from the most primitive (instinctual and sense

    based) to the most sublime. (28)

    Each chakra holds a lot of information about a persons personality. By studying various

    levels of chakra progress, different patterns begin to emerge, and it forms an understanding of

    the Self. Elphaba created alternate personalities. Her own personal experiences contributed to

    her deficient/ excessive chakras, which shaped her Self. It was unquestionably society who

    created the persona of the Wicked Witch of the West; Elphaba was left so damaged from chakra

    trauma that her Self was torn. I do not believe Elphaba was wicked, yet that is not what I am

    trying to prove. Breaux said, Through each chakra specific archetypal functions and images are

    expressed. Together, the seven chakras form a psychic matrix in which the unique form of the

    body-mind is created (31). There were divides within Elphaba, and chakra trauma can explain

    how, when and why they occurred. Table 1 organizes the chakra characteristics needed to

    explain who Elphaba was to herself and others, and why the Wicked Witch of the West is notthe

    same person.

    Chakra/ Location 7-Year Cycle1(Ages) Issue Color/ ElementRoot/Base 0-7 Survival Red/ Earth

    Sacral/Abdomen, Genitals 8-14Emotions/Sexuality

    Orange/ Water

    Solar Plexus 15-21 Power/ Will Yellow/ Fire

    Heart 22-28Love/

    RelationshipsGreen/ Air

    Throat 29-35 Communication Blue/ Sound

    Brow 36-42 Intuition Indigo/ Light

    Crown/Top of Head 43-49 Awareness Violet/ ThoughtTable1

    1From The Chakra Bible, written by Patricia Mercier

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    Carl Gustav Jung (1875-1961): Depth Psychology

    To accomplish an in depth analysis on Elphabas psyche, Jungian theories further explain

    specific patterns and archetypes of personality. C. G. Jung was a theorist/ psychologist who

    worked closely with Sigmund Freud; although they both formed well-known theories about the

    unconscious, Jung went farther to explain not just how, but where personality types develop. In

    1917 he spoke for the first time of dominants of the collective unconscious, by way of stressing

    the significance of those nodal points, especially charged with energy, the totality of which

    constitutes the collective unconscious, as noted in Complex/Archetype/Symbol in the

    Psychology of C. G. Jung, written by Jolandi Jacobi (33).

    Jung believed that most people confused self knowledge with knowledge of their

    conscious ego personalities [. . .] But the ego only knows its own contents, not the unconscious

    and its contents, as he points out in his bookThe Undiscovered Self(US,6). By examining the

    chakras, it is possible to realize multiple unconscious traits that reveal many of Jungs proposed

    schemas, as listed in Table 2 alongside the chakras corresponding Orientation of Self and

    Identity2.

    Chakra/ Location Orientation Identity Jungian SchemasRoot/Base Self-preservation Physical identity

    (Foundation/ Latent)Sacral/Abdomen, Genitals Self-gratification Emotional identity

    Solar Plexus Self-definition Ego identityDevelopment of the

    Individual

    Heart Self-acceptance Social identity the Complex

    Throat Self-expression Creative identity the Shadow

    Brow Self-reflectionArchetypal

    identityArchetypes and Persona

    Crown/Top of Head Self-knowledge Universal identityIntegration, Wholeness

    and the Self(and their opposites)

    Table2

    2Both of which are identified on Judiths chart, Figure 0.3: Table of Correspondences (10, 11)

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    MUNCHKINLANDERS AND THE LOWER CHAKRAS

    Personality patterns are found by identifying individual chakra qualities. Mercier

    identifies four chakra qualities: active, underactive/ deficient, passive/balanced, and

    overactive (34). The amount of trauma the chakra has suffered determines the quality of the

    chakra. Trauma can manifest itself in many ways, and Elphaba experienced trauma over the

    very large spectrum of possible abuses. Because of the amount of trauma she experienced, most

    of Elphabas chakras are considered to be defective, whether it presents itself as either excessive

    or deficient.

    The specific damage the trauma does to the chakra depends on the level of development

    it affects. Judith explains the chakras function by explaining the importance of location:

    [Chakras] have become associated with various states of consciousness,

    archetypal elements, and physical constructs. The lower chakras, for example,

    which are physically closer to the earth, are related to the more practical matters

    of our lives- survival, moment, action. They are ruled by physical and social law.

    The upper chakras represent mental realms and work on a symbolic level through

    words, images, and concepts. (6)

    Therefore, Jungian systems cannot be mature enough to present themselves in the lower chakras,

    but are built upon the stability of the lower foundations. Years zero (prenatal) to seven mark the

    development of the First, Base, or Root chakra, located at the base of the spine. Foundation is

    the first chakras purpose. This chakra is responsible for basic survival, physical identity, and

    the fundamental right to be here. So is it any surprise that Elphaba would be deficient in this

    chakra? On the morning of her birth her father, a minister, prophesized that the devil is

    coming (14). By nightfall, her mother was being pursued by an angry mob ready to kill her in

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    mid-labor. And while her mother lay unconscious after delivery, her midwives plotted Elphabas

    murder.

    Unfortunately, the development of Elphabas foundation is dependent upon the same

    thing we all rely upon as children- what Breaux refers to as the parental matrix (48). The

    emotional complexes that children develop, and the psychological values absorbed from the

    parental environment create barriers to growth. Unless they are overcome, these barriers will

    affect the entire process of development (48). Needless to say, Elphaba was born to a mother

    she described as a giddy, alcoholic, imaginative, uncertain, desperate, brave, stubborn,

    supportive woman (174), and a father who was a fanatical preacher; scandalously, both were in

    a love triangle with a man named Turtle Heart. As expected, the foundation upon which Elphaba

    must face the issues of family, trust, and grounding is insufficient

    Look, a rainbow, remarked the senior midwife assisting in Melenas (Elphabas

    mother) delivery (26). Of course, it was not the infants virginal aura she was describing.

    Evidently, beneath the spit of the mothers fluids the infant glistened a scandalous shade of pale

    emerald (27), which foreshadowed events in her childhood that led to her deficient first chakra.

    In Judiths First Chakra at a Glance, she lists specific trauma particular of the first chakra as

    birth trauma, poor physical bonding with [the] mother, and feeding difficulties (52).

    Promptly following the discovery of Elphabas discolored skin, the newborns razor sharp teeth,

    a physical malfunction typical of the first chakra, bit the midwifes finger off to the second

    knuckle when it was offered to suckle. These teeth caused Elphaba to be nursed from a bottle,

    contributing to feeding complications and inadequate physical bonding with her mother. In fact,

    she was forced to wear a chin-sling for the first year of her life, as a precaution, and Melena

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    never developed the maternal affection for Elphaba she anticipated. Instead, she chewed on

    pinlobble leaves, to float away from the disaster (29).

    Melena was described as lustful and sneaky and good at it (36) by Nanny, the brusque

    old woman who raised her, and was to help Melena rear her children as well. Melena used wine,

    weed, and sex to abandon any emotional involvement with her daughter because she saw her as

    an obligation. This is a direct neglect of her first chakras basic right to be here. Judith says,

    Neglect is a subtler form of abandonment [. . .] Instability leads to a mistrust of others, causing

    further alienation from those who might give support (74). She also says that a hallmark of a

    deficient first chakra is a profound body-mind split because the body is deadened and the

    consciousness is elevated (80). This split explains why Elphabas energy is centered higher, and

    why she is so disconnected.

    Being grounded is important to the body-mind circuit. Breaux writes, with a closed or

    traumatized first chakra, the conscious self is cut off from the body, and is, therefore, unaware of

    its needs (46). Elphabas survival inevitably depended upon natural bonds and social

    development. Although Nanny tried socializing Elphaba when she was around two, the children

    at the daycare responded as Melena expected: A green child will be an open invitation to scorn

    and abuse. And the children are wickeder than adults, they have no sense of restraint (61).

    Though Nanny knew the importance of developing a grounding factor, she had no influence on

    the quality of development Elphaba received. Ambika Wauters articulates in Chakras and Their

    Archetypes: Uniting Energy Awareness with Spiritual Growth the consequence for being

    deficiently grounded; From the most primitive levels of survival to the more sophisticated

    lifestyle we are required to keep our feet firmly on the ground. We either master the

    fundamentals of survival or we become one of lifes victims (28). Ironically, Elphaba

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    consciously opted for the extreme opposite- she took to the skies on her magic broom when she

    got the chance.

    Whereas we learn about the development and exact trauma Elphabas first chakra faces in

    Munchinkinlanders, the details of the years prior to meeting Elphaba again at Shiz were

    neglected, leaving it possible to evaluate her second chakra only by deconstructing what is not

    explained. The Sacral chakra is located in the lower abdomen and maintains emotional identity.

    With her second chakra speculatively the weakest, to acknowledge that its controlling element is

    water would justify Elphabas hydrophobia and its painful irony. From infancy, water was

    painful for her. So, when she cried, it hurt. In an altercation with Fiyero, Elphabas one-true-

    love, in The Emerald City, readers witness the restraint she tried to put on her emotions because

    her tears burn like fire (245). This forced Elphaba to always suppress her emotions. She grew

    rigid, in her body and attitudes, which left her with insipid social skills.

    Because Elphaba already lacked appropriate grounding, there was an emotional divide

    between her Self and others. Breaux reveals, the main causes for the separateness and

    alienation experienced in the second chakra are defenses in idealism that we escape into to avoid

    being vulnerable to our feelings (65). When a classmate, Boq, recognizes Elphaba as a girl

    from his childhood play set, she quickly replies Oh well, I have no childhood [. . .] So, you can

    say what you like [. . .] I have to go now, then salutes and escape[s] almost at a run (112).

    Though Elphaba consistently stayed vague, through candid flashbacks, there is just enough

    evidence to piece together the first persona that developed within Elphaba.

    Jung defines the persona as a complicated system of relations between individual/

    consciousness and society, fittingly enough a kind of mask, designed on the one hand to make a

    definite impression upon others, and on the other hand, to conceal the true nature of the

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    individual (94). Through each stage of her life, Elphaba was called by a different name: Fabala,

    Elphie, Fae, Sister Saint Aelphaba, Auntie Witch, and, of course, the Wicked Witch of the West.

    Each of these names denotes a new persona, and a new divide in her psyche. The divide that

    affected the development of the lower chakras construct Elphabas first persona. Furthermore,

    having just one social role identification is seen by Jung as being a very fruitful source of

    neurosis and a man cannot get rid of himself in favour of an artificial personality without

    punishment (95), as stated in The Essential Jung (EJ), edited by Anthony Storr. Elphaba lived

    her entire life hiding behind other peoples ideas of her, and adopted at least six separate

    personas.

    Fabala

    Frex, Elphabas father, gave her the moniker Fabala, a derivative of the name he used

    because Melena hated it; it was their private bond, the father-daughter pact against the world

    (49-50). Much of Fabalas persona was contributed to by Frex and his religious and moral

    severity and inherited issues [of her] parents who have not worked out their own issues around

    sexuality, as Judith points out as Sacral chakra trauma in Second Chakra at a Glance (105).

    In a brief statement describing her father and sister, Nessarose, Elphaba gives a brief, but

    clear description of her limited childhood: Nessarose is a strong-willed semi-invalid [. . .] She

    is very smart, and thinks she is holy. She has inherited my fathers taste for religion. She isnt

    good at taking care of other people because she has never learned to take care of herself. She

    cant. My father required me to baby-sit her through most of my childhood (173-4). She even

    admitted her father used her as a tool for his missionary work: My dear father used me [. . .]

    he usedme as an object lesson. Looking as I did [. . .] they trusted him partly as a response to

    the freakiness of me. If the Unnamed God could love me, how much more responsible itd be to

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    the unadulterated them(250). Her brother, Shell, whose birth killed Melena, was honorably

    named after her parents shared lover, Turtle Heart, which proved to Elphaba how special he was

    thought to be. Being raised in such a constrictive habitat, with her siblings as two constant,

    living symbols of her traumatized second chakra, forced her to conform to her fathers dutiful

    expectations, especially because she was raised to believe she was inadvertently the reason for

    Nessaroses malformation, and her mothers death.

    Melena took herbal supplements, given to her by Nanny, during her second pregnancy as

    a precaution against having another green child. Enigmatically, Nessarose was born without

    arms. And Shell? He was the only healthy child, the male that Melena had hoped for since

    Elphabas conception, and she was not strong enough to survive his birth. Fabala was a slave to

    a missionary lifestyle, a religion she didnt believe in, and a family that burdened her enough to

    constrict any emotional release. Because she did not develop any creativity, enthusiasm or

    sensuality during this time in her life, her second chakra was closed, causing her to further deny

    herself of any pleasure. Judith explains why pleasure is so hard to achieve with a deficient

    second chakra: Since pleasure invites an expansion of energy from the core to the periphery,

    then someone with a deficient second chakra remains in a contracted state. Such a person tends

    to avoid pleasure, often because of a harsh inner critic that cannot allow fun without self-

    condemnation (145). Fabala is Elphabas inner critic, and Frexs outwardly devoted daughter.

    She is also the persona Elphaba accepts the least, and represses the most.

    GILLIKIN AND THE POWER CHAKRA

    The carrier of . . . consciousness is the individual, who does not produce the psyche on

    his own volition but is, on the contrary, performed by it and nourished by the gradual awakening

    of the consciousness during childhood (US, 47). The third chakra marks the development of

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    self-definition and ego identity. What should result from a healthy third chakra is the

    Individual. Judith says, The purpose of individuation is to integrate previously undeveloped

    aspects of oneself into a larger, comprehensive Self that is simultaneously personal and

    universal (175). And as Jung said, the individual does not control the psyche but is controlled

    by it; and with her first two chakras deeply lacking proper foundation, it is to be expected that,

    unless there is a major renovation on Elphabas psyche and her environment, her self-definition

    remains skewed and her ego is torn between possible identities.

    Arriving at Shiz University, Elphaba was already very much out of her comfort zone

    she was not able to keep herself isolated the way she was at home. She was forced into

    socializing. She was forced into dorming with Galinda3, the epitome of materialism, and

    someone she believed to be very much her opposite at Crage Hall. And, she was forced to

    question her inherent morals with constant propaganda against Animals circulating the school.4

    Jung says, Separation from his instinctual nature inevitably plunges civilized man into the

    conflict between conscious and unconscious, spirit and nature, knowledge and faith, a split that

    becomes pathological the moment his consciousness is no longer able to neglect or suppress his

    instinctual side (81). At seventeen years old, Elphaba was instinctively developing her self-

    definition, and understandably questioned the difference between good and evil frequently

    looking for the answer, even if she did not consciously know why.

    Elphabas time at Shiz proves to be greatly influential in her development because of the

    events that necessitate ethical judgments. In her first, true conversation with Galinda, the new

    roommates openly contemplate the existence of evil:

    3After Dr. Dillamonds death, Galinda changed her name, in his honor, to the ancient Saints name Glinda, becauseit was a common mispronunciation the doctor made.4The difference between animals and Animals is simple: animals are the species we keep as pets; Animals havehuman qualities, such as the ability to walk, talk, and reason. During Elphabas time at Shiz, the Wizard had begun

    to take away many of the Animals Civil rights.

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    [Galinda:] Evil exists, I know that, and its name is Boredome, and ministers are

    the guiltiest crew of all [. . .]

    [Elphaba:] But maybe there is something to what you say [. . .] I mean, evil and

    boredom. Evil and ennui. Evil and the lack of stimulation. Evil and sluggish

    blood. (103)

    With the third chakra harnessing will and power, Elphabas perception of evil is justifiable. She

    is a driven and passionate person, albeit modest. Elphabas Sacral chakra is excessive, largely

    due to inherited shame from [a] parent (166), a trauma Judith identifies, contributing to the

    third chakras energy. This causes a superfluous amount of energy focused, essentially, on

    willpower.

    At Shiz, Elphaba needed to cope and compensate for her green skin more than she ever

    had to before, because she did not have her fathers missionary message or Nessarose to hide

    behind and care for. She became invested in the Animal Rights movement. Judith states, An

    excessive will has a constant need to be in control of oneself, of others, of situations. In

    extremes, it is the bullydominating, aggressive, angry and inflated (209). Elphaba takes an

    apprenticeship with Dr. Dillamond, the Goat professor of Biological Arts at Shiz. She is only his

    secretary, yet she becomes so invested that she coerced Boq, Crope and Tibbett, boys from

    Briscoe Hall, to pilfer information pertaining to Dr. Dillamonds research of which they were not

    privy because of their social statuses. Dr. Dillamonds research was on its way to proving,

    scientifically, that there is no biological difference between humans and Animals.

    Had this, in fact, been proven, it would be detrimental to the Wizards political

    propaganda and bans on the Animals. Not long before a conclusion was to be drawn from his

    work, Dr. Dillamond was the victim of, what was to be referred to as, an accident. His murder

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    left, what she felt to be, the weight of his research to Elphaba. Though she could not make sense

    of it at the time, she made it a point to continue his work throughout her life. As Jung said in US:

    [Harmlessness and navet] lead to projection of the unrecognized evil in the

    other. This strengthens the opponents position in the most effective way

    because the projection carries the fear which we involuntarily and secretly feel for

    our own evil over to the other side [. . .] What is worse, our lack of insight

    deprives us of our capacity to deal with evil. (97)

    It was at Ama Clutchs funeral, the only potential eyewitness to Dr. Dillamonds murder,

    that Madame Morrible, Headmistress of Crage Hall at Shiz, made Elphaba, Glinda, and

    Nessarose an offer to prospect for the Wizard after their graduation from Shiz. She said it was

    because of Elphabas great internal power and source of will (203) that she is a proper

    candidate for the agents the Wizard needed. But Elphaba did not intend to be anyones pawn,

    because by this time, her self-definition was refined.

    By the time she met the Wizard in the Emerald City, Elphaba was an Individual, yet her

    beliefs contradicted with that of her State. As Jung explains, The goal and meaning of

    individual life (which is the only real life) no longer lie in individual development but in the

    policy of the State, which is thrust upon the individual from the outside and consists in the

    execution of an abstract idea which ultimately tends to attract all life to itself (14). By explicitly

    defying the wishes of the State, both Madame Morrible and the Wizard, Elphabas vows for

    justice exhibit excess characteristic traits of the third chakra; her need to be right [and] always

    have the last word, her stubbornness, and driving ambition (Judith, 167).

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    Elphie

    Elphaba went by Elphie while at Shiz less out of choice and more by convenience.

    Still, Elphie is the persona Elphaba used to get through school. Elphie was social. She had

    friends. The color of her skin meant little. More importantly, however, Elphie left Elphaba the

    most exposed. By letting her guard down, Elphie was able express her beliefs and, eventually,

    be accepted by her peers.

    Elphie challenged the power of authority in order to harness her own strength. Though

    Elphaba is usually reserved, Elphie made public spectacles out of both Madame Morrible, for her

    tasteless anti-Animal poetry, and Dr. Nikidik, Dr. Dillamonds replacement, for his experiments

    on a Lion Cub too young to even be separated from his mother. This lends to the belief that

    Elphie acts autonomously and proactively. Elphie fulfills the third chakras purpose of

    transformation.

    Breaux points out that Jung describes the ego as a complex of psychic factors and

    general awareness of the body that attracts the contents from the unconscious and the outside

    world with which it identifies (26). This being said, Elphie is Elphabas ego, and the closest

    means and example of conforming to ones environment. Although Elphaba accomplished

    Individuation, it was only through connections Elphie made. Elphie always remains a powerful

    persona, but with her meeting with the Wizard being such a disappointment, any positive

    influence Elphie could have had on Elphabas personality was withdrawn and suppressed, as her

    excessive qualities become magnified in extreme situations.

    THE [GREEN]CITY OF EMERALDS

    A frustrated Elphaba said goodbye to Glinda after the overwhelming meeting with the

    Wizard. Her disgust with the Wizard led her underground. During those years, there was a

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    developmental energy shift from the third to the fourth chakrathe heart chakra, associated with

    the color green, and its related element, air. This chakra should balance the psyche, yet it was at

    this time Elphaba was most traumatized, which left the psyche shattered instead. Jung would

    call the shards Complexes.

    Whereas Elphie was Elphabas social persona, it is the fourth chakra that harnesses social

    identity. Thus, by flee[ing] to the Emerald City on some obscure mission, never to return . . .

    [with] never a postcard, never a message, never a clue (234), her true social characteristics are

    withdrawn. Jungs Psychological Typology5 supports why someone would choose a lifestyle

    such as Elphabas:

    The introvert is by no means a social loss. His retreat into himself is not a final

    renunciation of the world, but a search for quietude, where alone, it is possible for

    him to make his contribution to the life of the community. This type of person is

    the victim of numerous misunderstandingsnot unjustly, for he actually invites

    them. Nor can he be acquitted of the charge of taking a secret delight in the

    mystification, and that being misunderstood gives him a certain satisfaction, since

    it reaffirms his pessimistic outlook. (143)

    But five years after leaving Shiz, Fiyero confronted Elphaba after meeting her in Saint Glindas

    Square and chasing her to her hideaway. When asked why she cut herself off from everyone she

    replied she loved [them] too much to keep in touch (240).

    At first glance, this response may seem irrational. But, Judith explains:

    The deficient heart chakra is an avoidant response to too little love. Since the

    unloved child did not get met with empathy for their experience, they have trouble

    giving empathy to others (as well as themselves). They lack compassion and

    5Collective Works 6, pars. 960-87, as referenced inEJ

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    remain critical and judgmental, which hurts the people they love and closes

    channels for expression and reception. (271)

    Elphaba did not know how to love. And how could she? The fourth chakra thrives on the

    assumption that the lower chakras are grounded. If the foundation is not stable, however, the

    more it is vulnerable to other abuses. Elphaba endured constant trauma through rejection,

    shaming, constant criticism, and a loveless, cold environment while growing up (Judith,

    222). All of this contributed to her twisted image of love. Her psyche was so damaged, at this

    point, that she displayed every deficient characteristic Judith identifies for this chakra:

    antisocial, withdrawn, cold, critical, judgmental, intolerant of self [and] others, loneliness,

    isolation, depression, fear of intimacy[ and] relationships, [and] lack of empathy (223).

    Running away and going underground was the only way she knew how to demonstrate love; it

    was a pattern she followed her entire life.

    Though she admitted to genuinely loving her family, especially Nessarose, Fiyero was

    her only true love. Because he showed concern for her like no one else had, Elphaba was able to

    overcome many of her deficiencies to create a complex that was capable of forming an amorous

    relationship. She gave herself to him, as she had never given herself to anyone (and would never

    do again). They passionately made love, as passionately as they talked about religion and

    politics, and together, escaped the world whenever they would rendezvous. Their affair was

    nearly perfect, but very flawedit was adulterous. Fiyero, the Arjiki prince, had a childhood-

    wife back in the Vinkus6.

    Elphaba knew right from wrong. She also had very low self-esteem. As much as she

    loved Fiyero, she could not understand how or why he would love her. She tried to excuse or

    6They had both been married at a very young age, and had three children together. Sarima (his wife) two sons(Manek and Irji), daughter, (Nor) and Sarimas six spinster sisters all lived in the castle Kiamo Ko, in the Vinkus.

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    justify her insecurities about love and her need for distance: You should go away, Im not

    worthy of you [. . .] I love you so much, Fiyero, you just dont understand: Being born with a

    talent or an inclination for goodness is the aberration (257). Fiyero was even able to predict

    when she was about to postpone their next meeting: their lovemaking would become

    extraordinary more passionate. He also knew that there was an alternate guise he was unfamiliar

    with, and the type of work she did that required it.

    Elphaba believed that you shouldnt fall in love [because] it blinds you. Love is a

    wicked distraction (253). In her line of work7, Elphaba was supposed to remain anonymous.

    Yet, she maintained a relationship with Fiyero, which forced her to balance at least two, of many,

    complexes at any given time: Fae, the Lover, and Fae, the secret agent against the State. Jacobi

    writes about the phenomenology of the complex: The complex ego can break completely out

    of the psychic organization, split off and become autonomous. This leads to the phenomenon of

    the dual personality (Janet8), or to a disintegration into several partial personalities according to

    the number and nature of the patients unconscious complexes (15). With so many complexes

    already conflicting within her, Fiyeros murder left Elphabas destroyed psyche in irreparable

    disarray, and her fourth chakra completely closed off.

    Fae

    Fae is an enigma; at least, that is what she strives to be. Fae is the codename Elphaba is

    given by the Resistance, but it is also Fiyeros pet name for her. Fae strives to embrace the

    qualities of the fourth chakra. She tries to balance Elphabas passions. She attempts to accept

    7Elphaba is an agent for the Animal Relief League (or the likes, it was never specified). She describes her role toFiyero: There is a campaign but no agents, there is a game but no players. I have no colleagues. I have no self

    [. . .] I amjust a muscular twitch in the larger organism (255).

    8 Referencing Pierre Marie Flix Janet, believed by some to be the true father of psychoanalysis, as opposed to

    Freud.

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    herself and others. But the heart chakras primary demongriefreverses any progress she

    may have made.

    Imagine a mirror. When broken, it has two dispositions; it can either crack into pieces, or

    splinter into shards. The traumas Elphaba managed throughout her life broke her psyche into

    manageable pieces, her complexes. Fae tried to develop a meaning behind Elphabas struggles,

    and piece Elphabas psyche together in order to do it. She allowed Elphaba to experience love

    and fight passionately about a cause, which in turn, made her feel like a contributing member to

    society (or her ideal image of one).

    The farther Elphaba repressed Fabala and Elphie, though, the more she resembled an

    archetypal witch. Upon her reintroduction to Fiyero, Elphaba briefly remarks how her ascetic

    lifestyle may be perceived to others: Well, Id soon as soon be thought a witch as anything else.

    Why not (237). Knowing that others may imagine her in this way, she adopts another complex.

    With Fae still keeping her grounded, Elphaba knew that fully assuming a witchs role would hurt

    her cause, so stifling the newly acquired complex was a simple conclusionHow can I worry

    about [my family] and be worried about the campaign of the season too? I cant course around

    Ozon that broomstick there, like a storybook witch!Ive chosen to go underground so that I

    cant worry (251).

    The middle chakra is responsible for creating a clear persona. At the pivotal time when

    this clarity should be shown, however, Elphaba receives a shattering blow in which her psyche is

    never able to recover. Thus, Elphaba could not demonstrate any one, clear persona. Against

    Elphabas wishes, Fiyero trails her on a secret-mission she was given by the Resistance9, fearing

    she was in danger. After seeing her hesitate, then losing her in a crowd, Fiyero returns to their

    9SheattemptstoassassinateMadameMorrible,inwhichsheultimatelyfails

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    love nestto be brutally murdered by Gale Force members10

    . It must be assumed that Elphaba

    found the gruesome scene, because next we know, Elphaba arrives, bloodstained, to the Church

    of Saint Glinda.

    For a self-proclaimed atheist [and] aspiritualist (177) to search for refuge at a

    mauntery11, Elphaba was desperate and miserable. Fae was unable to facilitate her recovery

    because losing Fiyero was the strike to Elphabas psyche that shattered it, leaving the pieces too

    small to micromanage. Whereas Elphaba was previously able to subsist alongside her personas

    in harmony, this suffering led to a complete split within her. Because of this split, we begin

    seeing the replacement of Elphabas civility with the tendencies of a conventional witch. As

    Jung said, Where love stops, power begins, and violence, and terror (106).

    IN THE VINKUS AND THE THROAT

    We cant block the ears, eyes, or nerve endings of the skin as thoroughly as we can

    block our throat, so it is easier to block expression that it is reception, easier to block what comes

    out of us than what comes in (Judith, 305). Judiths enlightenment on the fourth, or Throat,

    chakra explains why Elphaba sought refuge at a mauntery. Maunts, Maguires nuns, had a

    very restrictive, structured lifestyle. They are disciplined and all freewill is forfeited. Elphaba

    sought stability in an attempt to control her Self, which was collapsing.

    When we are introduced to Elphaba again, it is seven years (a chakra cycle) after Fiyeros

    fatality, and her description lacks any sort of familiarity: She didnt look like one of anything to

    Oatsie, neither flesh nor fowl, neither idiot nor intellectual. Sister Saint Aelphaba just stared at

    the floor (290). Elphaba reminisced about the years she lived with the cloister (group of

    10MembersoftheWizardsarmy11Convent

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    nuns) as Sister Saint Aelphaba, which enables us to deconstruct the years immediately following

    her escape from Emerald City. While at the mauntery, she lived in three years of absolute

    silence, two years of a whisper, and then, moved up (and outward) by the decision of the

    Superior Maunt, two years on the ward for incurable. There, for nine months [. . .] she tended

    the dying, and those too clumsy to die (293). The cloister gave Elphaba a purpose. She was

    content with her work, and the tedium associated with it.

    But it was when she tended to Tibbett in the Home for the Incurables that he reminded

    her that she didthink. [And,] under the scrutiny of his tired frame she was recreated, against

    her will, as an individual. Or nearly (294). Within the year, and with much encouragement by

    the Superior Maunt to atone for her mistakes (294), she arranged a trip to the VinkusKiamo

    Ko, to be exact. All she took with her on the dangerous caravan trip, the Grasstrail Train guided

    by Oatsie, was a broom given to her by Mother Yackle12, said to be [the] link to [her] destiny

    (347), and a young boy named Liir. Liir never knew why he was left in Elphabas custody, nor

    did she know if he was her son. Either way, she felt, and instinctually treated him, as an

    obligationagain a reflection of her own upbringing.

    While the caravan passed through the Kumbricias Pass, however, Oatsie, Elphaba, and

    three other passengers were invitedrequested(ordered?) to the Scrow13 shrine (304), to

    meet with their leader, Princess Nastoya. When asked by the Elephant princess what her

    intentions as a traveler were, Elphaba responds honestly, To retire from this world after making

    sure of the safety of the survivors of my lover. To face his widow, Sarima, in guilt and

    responsibility, and then to remove myself from the darkening world (306). Openly vocalizing

    12En enigmatic old crone who resurfaces throughout Elphabas life without her knowledge13One of two tribes (the Scrow and the Yunmata) that live within Kumbricias Pass

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    her burden and desperation led Nastoya to identify with Elphaba, because she, too, was living

    under false pretenses (she was an Elephant, enchanted to live in human form).

    Nastoya not only befriended Elphaba, but also changed her life. The princess gave

    Elphaba three crows and told her she was to live in hiding as a witch. When Elphaba questioned

    if life was worth living in the wrong form, Nastoya replied, The interior doesnt change [. . .]

    except by self-involvement. Of which be not afraid, and also aware (308). Elphaba could have

    disagreed, and dejected the stigma of a witch. Similar to how she had lived for nearly a decade,

    she remained quiet and accepting of her fate.

    After her private meeting with the princess, Elphaba returned to the caravan and almost

    immediately denounced her title, Sister, and told Oatsie, simply, I am no longer a sister, I am

    a witch (310). Throughout her journey, she acquired the cooks dog, Killyjoy, as a companion

    for Liir, a swarm of bees (that she was able to somehow talk to), the crows Princess Nastoya

    gave her, and a monkey she rescued and named Chistery. Had she not already assumed the role

    of a witch, the company she kept would have illustrated it for her. Arriving at Kiamo Ko,

    Sarima asks Elphaba for her name, to which she replied, I come from the back of the wind [. . .]

    and I have given up my name so often I dont like to bring it out for you (318). But Sarima

    knew Elphabas name from stories Fiyero told of his time at Shiz; surely, she couldnt forget the

    green girl. Elphaba did not plan to stay, but when she told Sarima she blamed herself for

    Fiyeros death, Sarima insisted she didnt want to hear it. She even said, If I remember rightly

    [. . .] youre the one who didnt believe in the soul. I remember that much, so whats to forgive,

    dearie (319)? Sarima had control, and she stifled Elphabas voice. Because Elphaba could not

    vocalize what she came to be forgiven for, she could not leave.

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    Out of courtesy, Sarima introduced Elphaba to her sisters and children as Auntie Guest.

    Yet, it converted to the epithet Auntie Witch, first by the children, followed closely by the adults.

    Elphabas fifth chakra was doomed from the beginning, but instead of being completely limited

    because her sense of voice was taken away, Elphaba developed excessive characteristics Judith

    would identify as talking as a defense, inability to listen, dominating voice, [frequent]

    interruptions, (287) because the energy was present but suppressed. Elphaba kept very much to

    herself while at Kiamo Ko, until Nanny came to find her, after being the first in the family to

    hear any evidence of her since she went underground. Though very old, Nanny still had most of

    her wits and all of her brutal honesty. She was the balance to Elphabas disengaged voice when

    it came to simple, everyday, commonsense matters that couldnt concern Elphaba. But when it

    came to action and authority, Elphaba was dominant and unwavering.

    The most lucid example of excessive characteristics in Elphabas Throat chakra, though,

    is her work with Chistery. Most of her time was spent in the solitary of her room, reading the

    Grimmerie14 and performing experiments on the monkey. Trying to continue Dr. Dillamonds

    efforts, she began trying to teach Chistery how to speak. By giving a voice to another animal,

    Elphaba hopes to find value, and her place, in the struggle for Animal equality. She was

    reasonably successful in these efforts, too. Chistery had a vocabulary of most one-syllable

    words, and was able to produce similar results in other monkeys she acquired. Eventually,

    Chistery was taught to be a reasonably functioning member of the family, and was a great

    companion for Nanny at her old age.

    However, Elphaba was never able to tell Sarima anything. While Elphaba was away on a

    trip to Colwen Grounds to visit Frex and Nessarose for the first time since she went underground

    14ThemagicbookElphabawasgivenbySarima. Sarima,whowasilliterateandhadneveropenedit,saiditwasleftbyanoldsorcererfromanotherworld,manyyearsprior,whosaidheneededtohideitbecauseitwastoopowerfultobedestroyed,buttoothreateningtotheotherplacetobepreserved(341).

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    nearly fifteen years earlier, Gale Force soldiers marched Sarima and her entire family to their

    base camp, and Liir followed, hoping the soldiers would take him in. Upon Elphabas return,

    Nanny, Chistery, and Elphabas menagerie of other animals were the only residents left in Kiamo

    Ko. With all hope of absolution lost, any desire to repair Elphabas psyche was eradicated.

    Sister Saint Aelphaba/ Auntie Witch

    Throughout this chakra cycle, we are introduced to two different personalities Elphaba

    assumes. Judith identifies the fifth chakra as the [facilitator of] a profound passage between the

    abstract information of conception, image, and idea, and the manifested realm of the material

    world (335). Sister Saint Aelphaba demonstrates Elphabas ability to release control, and

    submit to others desires. On the other hand, Auntie Witch is a character Elphaba assumes in

    retaliation to those who have traumatized her. Whereas Sister Saint Aelphaba is grounded as a

    functioning member of society, Auntie Witch plays into the pariah role Elphaba often escapes.

    Breaux believes, when a constellation of pain and confusion has formed around the

    emotional or physical body over considerable time, and the mental body and brain have learned

    to shut off or repress stimuli that activate the memory patterns associated with the original

    traumas, the mind may become completely divorced from physical reality (psychosis) (124).

    This helps explain why it was so easy for Elphaba to release her will and adapt multiple, often

    conflicting, personas. Sister Saint Aelphaba repressed not only Elphabas voice, but also choice.

    She, like her lower personalities, attempts to protect Elphaba by trying to restore and balance the

    chakra. Sister Elphaba was her transition period between living as a physical presence and

    living as a concept (a witch).

    Auntie Witch, however, is our first instance of a self-destructive persona. She is also an

    example of Jungs proposed Shadow: By Shadow I mean the negative side of the

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    personality, the sum of all those unpleasant qualities we like to hide, together with the

    insufficiently developed functions and the content of the personal unconscious (EJ, 88). To

    understand the Shadow, we must also understand the collective unconscious.

    Whereas the contents of the personal unconscious are acquired during the

    individuals lifetime, the contents of the collective unconscious are invariably

    archetypes that were present from the beginning [. . .] closer examination of the

    dark characteristicsthat is, the inferiorities constituting the shadowreveals

    that they have an emotional nature, a kind of autonomy, and accordingly, an

    obsessive or, better, possessive quality. (EJ, 91)

    After accepting the role of a witch, Elphabas life began to resemble that of the storybook

    witch she criticized in discussions with Fiyero. Throughout the novel, the tale of the Kumbric

    Witch identified the basis of Ozs archetypal witch. Just before Elphaba began to masquerade as

    a witch, Igo, another passenger on the Grasstrail Train, articulates the Kumbric Witchs status:

    Every other witch is just a shadow, a daughter, a sister, a decadent descendent; the Kumbric

    Witch is the model further back than which it seems impossible to go (298). This presented

    Elphaba with a profile to abide by, if she was to truly embrace a witchs persona.

    Elphaba needed the potential to be a believable witch already inside of her in order to

    succeed in creating this new identity. (Can you imagine Glinda trying to be a witch? It has a

    much different product.) Breaux believes that because it is in the unconscious, the shadow is

    most commonly experienced as a projection onto another person of the same sex. The

    characteristics that we react to in a person we dislike are good reflections of the part of ourselves

    we despise (84). In this case, Elphaba sees that a witch is seen as powerful, feared and obeyed.

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    By emulating the Kumbric Witch, she focused the development of her personal shadowthe

    very thing she had worked against her entire lifeand finally embraced it.

    Symbolic thinking is one of the fifth chakras developmental tasks, according to Judith

    (286). Examining the rise in energy through the chakras presents us with evidence that Elphaba

    is transitioning between the concrete needs of her body and her survival, to the thoughts of

    abstract entities, such as magic and the afterlife; though the internal power struggle between

    good and evil never relinquished its grip on her consciousness. Wauters suggests, Each

    [chakra] relates not only to the health energy of the physical body but also has specific emotional

    issues [. . .] It is our thoughts and attitudes, more than anything else, which block or release the

    flow of energy through the chakras (21). After the loss of Fiyeros family to the Gale Forces,

    and the news of Nessaroses death, Elphaba used the Witch to protect her psyche from further

    damage. Unfortunately, it was too late. Whereas, she was playing the part of a witch in the fifth

    chakra, she began living in delusions after the death of her sistera time when she was already

    in transition to the higher chakras. The Wicked Witch of the West is a result of Auntie Witch

    being the only identity Elphaba is fully able to associate with.

    THE MURDER AND [NO]AFTERLIFE:THE UPPER CHAKRAS

    The persona. . . is the individuals system of adaptation to, or the manner he assumed in

    dealing with, the world [. . .] Only, the danger is that (people) become identical with their

    personas [. . .] One could say with little exaggeration, that the persona is that which in reality one

    is not, but which oneself as well as others thinks one is (EJ, 420). Jungs definition of a

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    persona15

    confirms the proposed idea that Elphabas split personality is due to the ideas others

    created of her.

    The Brow chakra is supposed to establish personal identity, but Elphaba is unable to

    establish one because she has lived as so many other characters. Remember, Jung warns against

    adopting a persona in favor of an individual identity (as it leads to psychosis). Yet, Elphaba

    adopts numerous personas, and the effects are visible in the sixth chakra; but how did she go

    from being a driven activist to a disturbed public-enemy? Judiths book may hold one

    explanation: When illusion is fed by a sixth chakra excess, it becomes obsession or delusion.

    Obsessions fix an unusual amount of energy on a particular issue; delusion assembles elaborate

    illusions around a central theme (347). In The Murder and Its Afterlife, two of Elphabas

    obsessions can be identified: getting her sisters ruby slippers and wreaking havoc as the Wicked

    Witch of the West to spite the Wizard. Whats more, both of these obsessions spawn elaborate

    delusions.

    At one point towards the end, she even believed that the Scarecrow accompanying

    Dorothy to Kiamo Ko was Fiyero coming home to reunite with her. Her delusions eventually

    made her question her own sanity and beliefs: She wondered, briefly, if she was going insane [.

    . .] A person who doesnt believe in the Unnamed God, or anything else, cant have a soul [. . .]

    The history of people who have shucked off religion isnt an especially persuasive argument for

    living without it. Is religion itselfthat tired and ironic phrasethe necessary evil (495)?

    As if there was not enough evidence to support the importance of grounding, Judith

    mentions, excess energy in the sixth chakra happens when energy is withdrawn from the lower

    chakras (371). Appreciating how deficient most of her lower chakras are, it is no wonder

    Elphaba is in pieces. Personas and archetypes ruled her life. The sixth chakra directs

    15CollectiveWorks9,par.221

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    archetypal identity, and as Jacobi explains, The archetype, like everything that is

    psychologically alive, has the essential attribute of bipolarity. Like a Janus head, it is turned

    both forwards and backwards, integrating into a meaningful whole with all the possibilities of

    which has been and of that of which is still to come (65). So, when accepting the role of the

    Wicked Witch of the West, Elphaba strengthened her personal psyche by assuming a strong

    archetype, but damaged her social relationships and image because of its status in the collective

    unconscious. Judith explains the importance of myth on our Self, and the State:

    Myths are the cultural stories of our origins and purpose. Unconsciously, these

    stories influence and may even rule over our lives. They define what is possible,

    shape who we are, and lead us to what we can be. Myths are a statement of the

    primal relationships that exist between archetypal elements in the universe, and

    the counterparts in our own psyche. (225)

    As with many fairy-tales, magic plays an important role. Elphaba psychically executed

    two people, the Cook on the caravan to the Vinkus and Manek, without knowing she had the

    power to do it. She also learned how to fly on her broom, and cast spells to help her monkeys

    fly16. Jung says, Magic has above all a psychological effect whose importance should not be

    underestimated. The performance of magical action gives the person concerned a feeling of

    security which is absolutely essential for carrying out a decision, because a decision is inevitably

    somewhat one-sided and is therefore rightly felt to be a risk (26). In her table on page 11,

    Judith identifies psychic perception as a goal of the sixth chakra. Elphaba did not believe she

    held any supernatural powers, yet she was able to read the Grimmerie, and see into Turtle

    Hearts magic looking glass. Breaux says, The sixth chakra is sometimes called the third eye

    because of its potential for clairvoyance, the ability to perceive the subtle energies of non-

    16Shewasonlyabletodothisaftershewassuccessfullyabletosurgicallyattachwingstothem

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    physical realms (162). Frex made the same revelation, reflecting, You always had strong eyes

    [. . .] Even as a toddler you could see things no one else could (434). Regrettably, by the time

    she reached the sixth chakra, her delusions distorted her reality, and she was living in a fantasy.

    The Wicked Witch of the West dies at the age of thirty-seven, which means, Elphaba

    died before the development of her seventh chakra. Yet, it is clear how damaged the chakra

    would have been had she reached its maturity. Had she lived, Elphaba may have resolved the

    concerns she had with the spirit and the soul. Judith explains the relationship between the

    two: Soul is the individual expression of spirit, and spirit is the universal expression of the soul.

    They each connect and are enhanced by each other (13). Throughout the novel, readers see

    Elphaba struggle with the idea of a soul. While trying to magically revive Liir, Elphaba cries

    out, I have no personal experience with a soulhow can I revive his if I dont know what one

    looks like (362)?

    By renouncing religion, Elphaba lost any type of spiritual connection that may have

    eventually presented itself. Jung believes that the individual who is not anchored in God can

    offer no resistance on his own resources to the physical and moral blandishments of the world,

    (US, 24) and the rupture between faith and knowledge is a symptom of the split consciousness

    which is so characteristic of the mental disorder of our day (US, 74). By the time Dorothy and

    Toto, Nick Chopper (the TinMan), Brr (the Cowardly Lion), and the Scarecrow arrived at Kiamo

    Ko, the Wicked Witch was the only distinct persona left within Elphaba. The others were no

    longer strong enough to protect Elphaba, and the unused energy of the lower chakras filtered

    upward, into the higher chakras, creating excessive power and energy flow there.

    Though her death was accidental, it was what she wanted. Elphaba did not want to

    believe in the soul. In her delusional confrontation with Dorothy, she made her reasons clear

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    why: Youre my soul come scavenging for me, I can feel it [. . .] I wont have it, I wont have it.

    I wont have a soul; with a soul there is an everlastingness, and life has tortured me enough

    (511-12). Yet, in saying this, she is acknowledging that there is an afterlife, something she

    refused her entire lifeI think thats shameful, even if its just a story17

    , to propose an afterlife

    for evil [. . .]Any afterlife notion is a manipulation and sop. Its shameful the way the unionists

    and pagans both keep talking up hell for intimidation and the airy Other Land for reward (348).

    This polar split in attitudes is only one example of the vast differences between Elphaba and the

    Wicked Witch of the West.

    The Wicked Witch of the West

    Elphaba died long before her physical death. One might even say she never really

    livedshe merely existed. The culmination of each persona led to the creation of the Wicked

    Witch of the West. Everything that was at the core of Elphabas personality was gradually lost

    throughout the transitions between each persona, until finally, there was nothing left of her

    original character. The Wicked Witch and Elphaba are an example of extreme, dichotomous,

    internal struggles of the Self: strong/weak, loyal/traitorous, loving/murderous, good/evil, and,

    naturally, soul/soulless. But, as Breaux suggests, The soul complex becomes immortal in the

    sense that it partakes of its Absolute Nature (200). So, did death bring for Elphaba what she

    expected?

    Every cause Elphaba cared about and fought for ended in disappointment (Animal

    Rights, her affair with Fiyero, Sarimas forgiveness, the murder18

    of Madame Morrible, and her

    pursuit of the ruby slippers). Because of her inability to succeed, Elphaba struggled with finding

    17ReferencingtheKumbricWitch18BythesecondtimeElphabaattemptedtomurderMadameMorrible,shefoundherdeadinherbed. Sheproceededtobludgeonherinanattempttomaintainshewasresponsibleforherdeath. Whenshetriedtocirculatethefabricatedstory,thosewhoknewherhadahardtimeacceptingitsvalidity.

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    acceptance. Rejection says we are unworthy and magnifies our basic shame to whatever degree

    we carry it. It turns us against ourselves, creating the deepest wound of all (Judith, 259).

    Elphabas first split occurred within Fabala, and was so severe that Elphabas development, in

    actuality, ends there; she is never wholly Elphaba ever again. The Wicked Witch was the

    surviving persona, whereas Elphaba was too weak to survive. Ultimately, while Elphaba was the

    victim, the Witch was the victimizer.

    Elphaba was naturally loving and loyal. She was unwavering when it came to the things

    she cared for. But Breaux suggests, The defense mechanisms adopted to deal with both

    emotional pain and an unjustified existence are some of the desperate hands that shape the masks

    we wear. Unfortunately, this defensive posture of the ego hardens us and we act in ways that are

    not always conducive to the satisfaction of our needs (86). The only murders committed by

    Elphaba were done in concern; she euthanized the monkeys that were unable to properly adapt to

    the complicated, wing-attaching surgery, and she saw to it that the suffering soldier died at

    once (497), too. The Witch attempts to lower herself to the murderous tactics of the Wizard,

    though she never succeeds.

    Jung says in The Undiscovered Self, resistance to the organized mass can be effected

    only by the man who is as well organized in his individuality as the mass itself (60). Clearly,

    Elphaba was a failure. In an attempt to locate her sisters ruby slippers, she confesses to Glinda,

    I have always felt like a pawn [. . .] My skin colors been a curse, my missionary parents made

    me sober and intense, my school days brought me up against political crimes against animals, my

    love life imploded and my lover died, and if I had any lifes work of my own, I havent found it

    yet, except in animal husbandry, if you can call it that (442). Yet, the Wizard fears the Wicked

    Witch of the West enough, because he knows she is in possession of the Grimmerie and has the

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    ability to read it, that he sends Dorothy to kill her. Jung agrees, Naturally, society has an

    indisputable right to protect itself against arrant subjectivism, but, in so far as society itself is

    composed of de-individualized persons, it is completely at the mercy of ruthless individualists

    (US, 55). Perhaps it was luck that Dorothy killed the Witch, but it was well-played attempt made

    by the stronger Individual (the Wizard) that ultimately killed the threatening persona. Murder

    or mercy killing or accident, in an indirect way it helped rid the country of its dictator (518)

    the evidence Dorothy brought the Wizard to prove Elphabas death provided him with evidence

    of something else so distressing he fled Oz within days. The Wizard murdered his own

    daughter

    19

    . This realization may be the only way in which Elphaba did not die in vain, yet, no

    one was privileged to the information, so the true reason for the Wizards departure was never

    credited to her.

    Though Elphaba was unsuccessful in her endeavors, she died while exhibiting

    characteristics of the Martyr archetype, identified by Wauters as the dysfunctional archetype

    of the Sacral chakra. Again, Elphabas development was stunted, if not stalled, in the lower

    chakras, which explains why her life was filled with so much misery:

    Many people collude with the Martyr to carry on suffering rather than to

    take the risks which will transform its life. Families and friends unconsciously

    encourage the Martyr to continue its tasks of looking after others so that they are

    free of the responsibility of having to do it [. . .] The Martyr can endure for years

    without making fundamental changes in its life. It blocks its life force, creates co-

    dependent relationships and never seems to really enjoy itself. The Martyr

    accepts a situation without making the changes which will empower it or give it

    19BeforetheWizardcametopower,hetraveledfromtheOtherLandtoOz. Duringhistravels,heandMelenacrossedpaths,andslepttogether(asMelenaoftendidwithstrangerswhenFrexleftherhomealone). HeofferedMelenaagreenbottleofmagicelixir,abottleElphabakeptasatokentorememberhermotherby.

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    more of a claim to happiness. It does, however, receive appreciation from others

    who share the same attitudes about suffering [. . .] This, in the end, is its only

    reward. (53)

    Elphabas name lived on after her death in two waysthere was Elphaba, an advocate for the

    underdog, who was silently mourned, and the Wicked Witch of the West, whose death became

    a celebrated event [. . .] hailed as a political assassination or a juicy murder (517-18).

    Perhaps Avaric, another schoolmate of Elphabas, got closest to recognizing the true

    distinction between good and evil, Evil isnt doing bad things, its feeling bad about them

    afterward. Theres no absolute value to behavior (473). If we were to assign a dichotomous

    characteristic to each personality, Elphaba can surely be perceived as good, while seeing the acts

    of Wicked Witch as evil barely requires an argument. Morally, Elphaba was always instinctively

    righteous. It was only because she fought against widely accepted authority that she explicitly

    became Ozs public-enemy.

    But the ultimate question is concerning the souldoes she have one? It depends.

    Elphaba, the Individual, has one, yet her personas, especially the Wicked Witch of the West, do

    not. Immediately after Dorothy doused Elphaba with water, she finally received the absolution

    and answers she had been working towards her entire life: An instant of sharp pain before the

    numbness. The world was floods above and fire below. If there was such a thing as a soul, the

    soul had gambled on a sort of baptism, and had it won? The body apologizes to the soul for its

    errors, and the soul asks forgiveness for squatting in the body without invitation (514).

    But Elphaba had already evolved away from her personas. So, with her physical death,

    they too died. Though their ending is, literally, not as soulful, the death is just as enlightening in

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    the assessment of how drastically her psyche was destroyed, and a final example of how

    radically different Elphaba truly was from the personas she developed.

    In the life of a Witch, there is no after, in the ever afterof a Witch, there is no

    happily; in the story of a Witch, there is no afterword. Of that part that is beyond

    the life story, beyond the story of the life, there isalas, or perhaps thank

    mercyno telling. She was dead, dead and gone, and all that was left of her was

    the carapace of her reputation for malice. (519)