Apprentice
Archetype

“I promise teach karate. That, my part. You promise learn. I say, you do. No question. That, your part.”
—Mr. Miyagi
The Karate Kid (1984)
Apprentice Characters
Every apprentice character is necessarily paired with a mentor figure. Apprentices must submit to their respective teachers, coaches, guides, or gurus to acquire important skills and knowledge. Trust is a pivotal factor in these asymmetric relationships. Apprentices symbolize the promise—and sometimes the risk—of a strong teacher-student bond and trust in an elder.
There is usually a formal or semi-formal arrangement between an apprentice and their instructor. Neither party enters into this special relationship casually.
Prominent Examples
- Arthur (with Merlin) in The Sword and the Stone (1963)
- Daniel LaRusso (with Mr. Miyagi) in The Karate Kid (1984)
- Luke Skywalker (with Yoda) in Star Wars: Episode V – The Empire Strikes Back (1980)
- Andrew Neiman (with Fletcher) in Whiplash (2014)
- Nawi (with Nanisca) in The Woman King (2022)
Definition
The apprentice archetype reflects a deferential orientation toward a mentor. In order to master a difficult skill or acquire esoteric knowledge, we must place ourselves in the vulnerable position of trusting in the authority of an expert who can teach us. We must also earn and sustain that mentor’s confidence.
Dramatic Dimensions
Archetypes are fluid orientations, not rigid types. These are common tendencies and associations—they may or may not apply in any particular case.
Narrative Roles
Motivations
Virtues
Vices
Perceptual Frames
Growth Opportunities
Taxonomy
Child Variants
The apprentice archetype is a variant of the broader child archetype.
Other variants of the child archetype:
Learn more
Dive deeper into the
Apprentice
archetype in my upcoming book, The Writer’s Guide to Archetypes: Elemental Dynamics of Character and Drama — Volume 1, expected in late 2026.
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