IJ
IJCRM
International Journal of Contemporary Research in Multidisciplinary
ISSN: 2583-7397
Open Access • Peer Reviewed
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International Journal of Contemporary Research In Multidisciplinary, 2026;5(1):532-538

The Manticore as an Ecological Psyche

Author Name: Dr. Syed Umra Shah;  

1. Amar Singh College Cluster University, Srinagar, Jammu and Kashmir, India

Paper Type: research paper
Article Information
Paper Received on: 2026-01-13
Paper Accepted on: 2026-01-29
Paper Published on: 2026-02-09
Abstract:

This paper examines the mythological figure of the manticore as a symbolic expression of ecological interconnectedness and psychological repression within literary and cultural traditions. Moving beyond conventional ecocritical approaches that focus on explicit representations of nature and environmental degradation, the study argues that hybrid mythic creatures function as powerful metaphors for humanity’s denied relationship with the natural world. Tracing the manticore’s evolution from its origins in Persian mythology through Greek and medieval bestiaries to modern literary reinterpretations, the paper demonstrates how the creature consistently embodies anxieties surrounding blurred boundaries between the human and the nonhuman. Drawing on Jungian psychology, particularly the concept of the shadow, the manticore is interpreted as an “ecological shadow” that represents repressed instincts, denied ecological embeddedness, and cultural fears of wildness. Special attention is given to Robertson Davies’s The Manticore, where the creature functions as a catalyst for psychological individuation and ecological awareness. Through this interdisciplinary analysis, the study positions the manticore as an unconventional yet significant figure within green literature, suggesting that ecological crises are deeply rooted in cultural narratives and psychic denial. By foregrounding symbolic monsters as tools of ecocritical inquiry, the paper calls for a broader understanding of environmental literature—one that integrates myth, psychology, and ecology to address the underlying causes of ecological imbalance.

Keywords:

Ecocriticism; Manticore; Ecological Shadow; Mythological Hybridity; Jungian Psychology; Green Literature; Anthropocentrism; Human–Nature Relationship; Robertson Davies; Environmental Symbolism

How to Cite this Article:

Dr. Syed Umra Shah. The Manticore as an Ecological Psyche. International Journal of Contemporary Research in Multidisciplinary. 2026: 5(1):532-538


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