The Lizard King

The Lizard King is a mythic figure created as an alter ego by Jim Morrison, lead singer of the popular psychedelic rock group The Doors.

Jim Morrison as The Lizard King

Morrison was deeply interested in metaphysics, both modern and classical. He was a proponent of both Jungian and Nietzschean ideas, and was also fascinated by Native American mysticism. Performances by the Doors often used words, actions, images and patterns intended to provoke a subconscious reaction in the audience. On stage, Morrison would often imitate a shaman by screeching, making animal sounds, suddenly falling over, and then either getting up laughing or playing dead. He would then slowly awaken from this "death" and smile wryly. Many shamans identified strongly with one deity, often embodied in an actual animal such as a bear or a crow in many forms of Native American shamanism. Morrison was fascinated by the lizard, believing that it symbolized a powerful force in the subconscious mind, epitomizing fear and longing in the psyche. His conception of the Lizard King has been interpreted by some as a recognition of a profound and transcendent spiritual reality. Like Buddha-nature, the Lizard King allegory represents a transcendent experience dormant in all humans, an archetype of the subconscious mind like the achievement of nirvana. The Lizard King agitates and disrupts, much like a Trickster Hero. Attributes associated with the Trickster archetype include cleverness and raw instinct. "I am the Lizard King, I can do anything!" Jim Morrison, "Not To Touch the Earth"

The Lizard King in Fiction

There is a character resembling Jim Morrison and the Lizard King in George R.R. Martin's short story collection Wild Cards. The short stories are written by various authors and set in a world where a genetically engineered virus has been released upon Earth, killing many but also transforming some characters, granting them superhuman powers. One of these characters, in the short story Transfigurations by Victor Milan, is referred to as "Tom Douglas" and "The Lizard King," but he obviously represents Jim Morrison: His voice soared in a sudden shriek, and the lights and the band boomed suddenly about him like storm surf breaking against the rocks, and they were launched on an odyssey to the furthest reaches of the night. At last he took on an aspect of the Lizard King. A black aura beat from him like furnace heat and washed across the audiece. Its effect was elusive, illusive, like some strange new drug: some onlookers it lifted to pinnacles of ecstasy, others it crammed down deep into hard-packed despair... Douglas' powers as a superhero/supervillain include super-strength, super-speed, and an ability to disorient people. At the end of the story, the Lizard King fights alongside the "Radical" against a Captain America-like "Hardhat."
In an episode of The Simpsons, Lisa Simpson is dared by her brother to drink the water of an amusement park ride. Lisa then begins hallucinating and, completely intoxicated, shouts "I am the Lizard Queen!".

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
ben shepherd
gerald groiset
peter weir (politician)
opposing force
abrahamic god
claude r. wickard
william wilton (football)
john slaughter
diana
summer science program
af107
warner spector records
kowethas an yeth kernewek
sasha mitchell
premio quevedos
hayes communications
old coke drinkers of america
the wizard (movie)
athletics at the 1972 summer olympics
gillian mckeith
fei lung sin
bella coola, british columbia
rpso
llwynypia
fried brain sandwich
the sea hawk (movie)
u.s. public institution
list of u.s. national parks by state
galaxy (disambiguation)
galaxy (candy)
the sadies
colossus of barletta
montagne sainte genevive
n5 (notation)
groombridge 1618
jesse birdsall
yaroslav ii of russia
price chopper
iziaslav iii of kiev
list of pop music performers by country
original celtics
cava de' tirreni
rostislav of kiev
sotalol