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Saturday, January 10, 2015

The Hero with a Thousand Faces (Bollingen Series, No. 17)

The Hero with a Thousand Faces (Bollingen Series, No. 17)

The Hero with a Thousand Faces (Bollingen Series, No. 17)


The Hero with a Thousand Faces (Bollingen Series, No. 17)

Thousand Faces  The Hero with a Thousand Faces (Bollingen Series, No. 17) Paperback – March 1, 1972

Joseph Campbell was one of the great souls of our age. I've read this book twice, first on my own and the second for a class in "Myth, Religion & the Mythic Imagination." I read the paperack to tatters, literally, marking each illuminating, exhilirating insight. "Dry"? "Not a fun read"? What book did YOU read? Campbell is unlike other writers on myth; he looks not at an entire myth but at its parts. By the end of the book, he has essentially created the Ultimate Hero Myth, which takes bits of every hero myth from virtually every culture (heavy on Native Americans). Campbell was not a dispassionate academic--this was his gospel, and he lived by it. This book is alive and inspiring like no other book I know. One unique aspect of it at the time it was published was its approach to Christianity. For Campbell, Christ's life had to be seen as a myth. Before him, most Western scholars wouldn't have dare to say such a thing. Others had written on that, but in a skeptical manner. Campbell's view is that the Virgin Birth, miracles, Resurrection, etc have meaning only because they ARE myths. Look, there'd be no "Star Wars" without this. No "Sandman" comics from Neil Gaiman. No "Watership Down." This book is for the intellectual who wants to LIVE, not just to sit sterile at the desk. Recommended like mad.

The Hero with a Thousand Faces (Bollingen Series, No. 17)

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