Books by Joseph Campbell
Born: 0/26/1904; Died: 10/30/1987Joseph Campbell Biography & Notes
Campbell was born and raised in New York City in an upper middle class Roman Catholic family. As a child, Campbell became fascinated with Native American culture when his father took him to see the American Museum of Natural History in New York. He soon became versed in numerous aspects of Native American society, primarily in its mythology. This led to Campbell's lifelong passion with myth and its similar, seemingly cohesive threads among all human cultures. At Dartmouth College he studied biology and mathematics, but later transferred to Columbia University, where he received a Bachelor of Arts degree in 1925 and a Master of Arts degree in 1927.
Campbell is considered by some to be one of the most famous autodidacts, or 'self-educators', and is sometimes seen as a poster child for this way of learning. After completing his master's degree, Campbell decided not to go forward with his plans to earn a doctorate; instead, he went into the woods in upstate New York, reading deeply for five years. According to poet and author Robert Bly, a friend of Campbell, Campbell developed a systematic program of reading nine hours a day. According to Campbell, this is, in a sense, where his real education took place, and the time when he began to develop his unique view on the nature of life.
He went on to study Old French and Sanskrit at the University of Paris and the University of Munich. He learned to speak at least French, German, Japanese, and Sanskrit in addition to English. Campbell began his literary career by editing the posthumous papers of Indologist Heinrich Zimmer. With Henry Morton Robinson he wrote A Skeleton Key to Finnegans Wake, for which generations of puzzled readers of James Joyce have been grateful.
Campbell studied the ideas of the Swiss psychiatrist Carl Jung, who had been a colleague of Sigmund Freud. Campbell's work in mythology sought to bridge the seemingly disparate stances of Jung and Freud and their pivotal debate over the collective unconscious. Campbell also edited the first Eranos conference papers and helped to found Princeton's Bollingen Press. Another dissident member of Freud's circle who influenced Campbell was Wilhelm Stekel (1868 - 1939), who pioneered the application of Freud's conceptions of dreams, fantasies of the human mind, and the unconscious to such fields as anthropology and literature.
Campbell was a professor at Sarah Lawrence College from 1934 until 1972. He married his student, Jean Erdman, a dancer, in 1938. He died in 1987, in Honolulu.
Campbell's original voice
Campbell relied on the texts of Jung as an explanation of psychological phenomena, as experienced through archetypes. But Campbell didn't agree with Carl Jung on every issue, and certainly had a very original voice of his own. Campbell didn't believe in astrology or synchronicity as Jung had. Campbell's true study and interpretation is in the melding of accepted ideas and symbolism. His iconoclastic approach was as original as it was radical. His take on religion has been compared to Einstein's idea of science in his last days, the search is for a unifying theory. Joseph Campbell believed all the religions of the world, all the rituals and deities, to be "masks" of the same transcendent truth which is "unknowable." He claims Christianity and Buddhism, whether the object is 'Buddha-consciousness' or 'Christ-consciousness,' to be an elevated awareness above "pairs of opposites," such as right and wrong. Needless to say, many religious exclusivists find his ideas heretical.
"Truth is one, the sages speak of it by many names," he often quoted from the Vedas. Joseph Campbell was fascinated by what he viewed as universal sentiments and truths, disseminated through cultures which all featured different manifestations. He wanted to show his idea that Eastern and Western religions are the same on a very basic level, and that nobody is right but everyone is searching for the same unknown, and indeed unknowable, answer. He began to look paradoxically at moral systems as both incorrect and necessary. Like the postmodern relativists he believed such things as 'right' and 'wrong' are just contrived ideas, but also like them he understood a moral system is necessary from the perspective of a student of mythology and psychology. In this way he melded also the concepts of modernism and postmodernism, although some interpretations place him as a postmodernist before his time.
In his four-volume series of books "The Masks of God", Campbell tried to summarize the main spiritual threads of the world, in support of his ideas on the "unity of the race of man"; tied in with this was the idea that most of the belief systems of the world had a common geographic ancestry, starting off on the fertile grasslands of Europe in the Bronze Age and moving to the Levant and the "Fertile Crescent" of Mesopotamia and back to Europe (and the Far East), where it was mixed with the newly emerging Indo-European (Aryan) culture.
He believed all spirituality is searching for the same unknown force (which he spoke of as an eminent, rather than transcendent, force, or that which is both within and without, as opposed to only without) from which everything came, in which everything currently exists, and into which everything will return. He referred to this force as the connotation of what he called "metaphors", the metaphors being the various deities and objects of spirituality in the world.
Hero mythology and the monomyth
Heroes played a crucial role in his comparative studies. In 1949 The Hero with a Thousand Faces set out the idea of the monomyth, a streamlined version of all the archetypal patterns Campbell recognized (Campbell's archivist at the Pacifica Graduate Institute says he borrowed the term from James Joyce's novel Finnegans Wake). The monomyth involves the hero receiving a "call to adventure"; to leave the ordinary world which he has psychologically or spiritually outgrown. After passing "threshold guardians" (often with the aid of a wise mentor or spirit guide) the hero enters a dreamlike world, generally a dark forest, a desert, an underworld or a mysterious island. After a series of trials in which the hero eventually surpasses his mentor, the hero achieves the object of his quest (often an atonement with the father, a sacred marriage or an apotheosis) before returning to his homeland, bringing with him a spiritual boon. Campbell wrote that almost all hero myths, throughout history and across cultures, can be shown to contain at least a subset of these patterns. In contemporary popular culture, three film series, Star Wars, The Matrix, and The Lord of the Rings (along with Tolkien's original The Lord of the Rings trilogy of novels) hew very closely to Campbell's archetypal pattern.
Heroes were important to Campbell because they conveyed, to him, universal truths about how one should live one's life and about an individual's role in society.
Influence
George Lucas has said that he based the Star Wars series on ideas in The Hero With a Thousand Faces and other works of Campbell. Musician and composer Tori Amos has also acknowledged the influence of Campbell in the ideas on mythology and archetypes she employs on her album projects.
Campbell said James Joyce and Thomas Mann were his gurus. (The Power of Myth, Tape 3)
Campbell's "Follow your bliss" idea was influenced by the Sinclair Lewis's character Babbitt, who in the book's last page, laments, "... practically, I've never done a single thing I've wanted to in my whole life! I don't know 's I've accomplished anything except just get along. I figure out I've made about a quarter of an inch out of a possible hundred rods. Well, maybe you'll carry things on further. I don't know. But I do get a kind of sneaking pleasure out of the fact that you knew what you wanted to do and did it. Well, those folks in there will try to bully you, and tame you down. Tell 'em to go to the devil! I'll back you. Take your factory job, if you want to. Don't be scared of the family. No, nor all of Zenith. Nor of yourself, the way I've been. Go ahead, old man! The world is yours!"
Campbell also referenced the Sanskrit concept of "Sat Chit Ananda". Sat (Being) Chit (Full Consciousness) Ananda (Rapture). He said, "I don't know whether my consciousness is full consciousness or not, and I don't know if my being is full being or not, so let me hang onto my rapture and that will bring me to both." (The Power of Myth)
Chris Vogler, a Hollywood film producer and writer, created a now legendary 7-page company memo, A Practical Guide to The Hero With a Thousand Faces, based on Campbell's work. Vogler's memo was later developed into a book, The Writer's Journey.
The Writer's Journey later became the basis for a number of successful Hollywood films, most notably, Disney's The Lion King. More recently, it has been taken up by computer game companies in search of new ideas and techniques for storyboarding and developing new products. Responding to those who would view his book as mere plagiarism or debasement of Campbell's complex ideas, Vogler has continually warned against viewing his book as a simple "formula" or "recipe" for writing success. Instead, Vogler encourages writers to delve into the world of archetypes and mythic structures as a deep source of enrichment for their own creative work. Creativity in writing emerges during the (conscious and unconscious) processes of deciding which archetypal elements to use, transmute, or discard.
Criticism
Soon after Campbell's death, Brendan Gill criticized him in an article, "The Faces of Joseph Campbell," published in the New York Review of Books on September 28, 1989, accusing him of "reactionary" political beliefs. A National University professor named Tom Snyder wrote an essay in 1991 entitled "Myth Perceptions: Joseph Campbell's Power of Deceit" that accused him of launching a single-minded vendetta against organized religion.
Campbell's scholarship has also come under attack; and the American novelist Kurt Vonnegut satirized Campbell's views as being excessively baroque by offering his interpretation of the monomyth, called the "In The Hole" theory; loosely defined as "The hero gets into trouble. The hero gets out of trouble."
Works
The Hero with a Thousand Faces (1949) is one of his best-known books: it discusses the monomyth cycle of the hero's journey, a pattern found in many cultures. His four-volume work The Masks of God covers the world of mythology.
Campbell's widest popular recognition came with his collaboration with Bill Moyers on the PBS series The Power of Myth, which was first broadcast in 1988, the year after Campbell's death in Honolulu. The series presented his ideas on archetypes to millions and remains a staple on PBS. A companion book, The Power of Myth, containing partial transcripts of their conversations, was released shortly afterward.
A recent compilation of many of his ideas is titled Thou Art That: Transforming Religious Metaphor. The book explains that religion and mythology are actually the same thing and he puts religious symbology in its proper mythological context. One of Campbell's favorite quotes is that "...Mythology is often thought of as 'other peoples' religions and religion can be defined as mis-interpreted mythology." He explains that by understanding religious symbols not as historical facts but rather as mythological images, the symbols can take on deeper and more-believable meanings for many people.
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The Art of Indian Asia Its Mythology and Transformations by Joseph Campbell, Eliot Elisofon, Heinrich Robert Zimmer ( 1983) |
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As I Was Among Captives' Joseph Campbell's Prison Diary, 1922-1923 by Eilean Ni Chuilleanain, Joseph Campbell ( 2001) |
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Baksheesh & Brahman Asian Journals, India by Joseph Campbell, Robin Larsen, Stephen Larsen, Antony Van Couvering ( 2002)
After ten years of intensive study of Indian art and philosophy, Joseph Campbell, at 50, finally embarked on a journey to India. Searching for the transcendent (Brahman), he found instead stark realities: growing nationalism, religious rivalry, poverty, and a prevalent culture of what he called "baksheesh," or alms. This journal chronicles the disillusionment and revelation that would change the course of Campbell's life and study, and his transition from professor to counterculture icon. Balancing Campbell's astute explorations of mythology and history are his often amusing observations of a sometimes frustrating alien culture and his fellow Western travelers. This account also includes personal photographs, specially commissioned maps, and illustrations redrawn from Campbell's own hand.
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Call of the Hero by Joseph Campbell ( 1991) |
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Changing Images of Man by O.W. Markley ( 1981) |
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Changing Images of Man by Joseph Campbell, Willis W. Harman, O.W. Markley, Center for the Study of Social Policy (SRI International) ( 1982) |
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The Eastern Way Oriental Mythology, the Mystical Traditions of India, Hinduism, Buddhism, Creativity in Oriental Mythology by Joseph Campbell ( 1997)
Presents key lectures on myth, symbolism, and spiritual awakening.
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The Eastern Way by Joseph Campbell ( 2003)
Presents key lectures on myth, symbolism, and spiritual awakening.
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Erotic Irony And Mythic Forms in the Art of Thomas Mann by Joseph Campbell ( 1991) |
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The Flight of the Wild Gander Explorations in the Mythological Dimension Selected Essays 1944-1968 by Joseph Campbell ( 2002)
The author of The Hero with a Thousand Faces explores the origins of myth from the Grimm fairy tales to Native American legends, explaining in a collection of essays how the symbolic content of myth is linked to universal human experience and how myths and experiences change over time.
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The Flight of the Wild Gander Explorations in the Mythological Dimension by Joseph Campbell ( 1990)
Focuses on the nature of myths and the significance of symbolic images to the human psyche, and discusses how the function of myths in everyday life has changed.
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Follow Your Bliss 52 Inspiration Cards by Joseph Campbell ( 2005) |
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The Hero With a Thousand Faces by Joseph Campbell ( )
Joseph Campbell transformed the way we view mythology, weaving traditional wisdom together with the modern struggle for identity and spiritual depth. This program brings new life to his brilliant poetic vision.
The Adventure of the Hero describes the universal image of the hero and shows that folklore and myth can serve as potent spiritual and psychological metaphors for modern man. This part of the program follows the mythological path from maturity to freedom, the heroic inner struggle that leads from birth to spiritual rebirth, to help us understand ourselves and the essence of what it means to be a human being. The Cosmogonic Cycle explores the global legends of the origins and creation of the universe and studies the hero in his various guises, including those of warrior, lover, world redeemer and saint. The saga leads us to the culmination of the cycle, the dissolution of the universe and the passing of the hero to other realms, a metaphor for the dissolution and resurrection of ourselves and the hero that lives within us all. |
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Hero With a Thousand Faces by Joseph Campbell ( 2001)
In his most famous work, Joseph Campbell, the great scholar of mythology, posits two revolutionary notions: there are mythical patterns found in the literature of every known historical culture, and these patterns are the basis of every story that gets told. However, Campbell argues that it is beneficial that every story is a re-telling of a previous one, and he focuses on two concepts that can be discovered in most narratives. The Hero's Journey is an eight-step process of growth and change that everyone from Greek gods to gas station workers experience in their lives; the Cosmogonic Cycle analyzes the interrelationship of creation and destruction myths. In the process, Campbell relates fantastic stories from a variety of time periods and cultural origins. This influential work inspired George Lucas to create STAR WARS, and has been a favorite of scholars and lay readers alike since its first publication in 1949.
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The Hero with a Thousand Faces by Joseph Campbell ( 2008)
A new expanded edition of the classic work on comparative mythology amasses the characteristics exemplified by mythological heroes and religious leaders of all centuries and cultures into a unified whole as it outlines the Hero's Journey as a universal motif of adventure running through all of the world's mythic traditions. 35,000 first printing.
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The Hero's Journey Joseph Campbell on His Life and Work by Stuart L. Brown, Phil Cousineau, Joseph Campbell ( 2003)
This much acclaimed work takes readers through Campbell's (1904-1987) personal spiritual and scholarly journey as he explores and compares mythology, religion, literature, and world cultures. The re-release celebrates what would have been the author's 100th birthday in 2004. In a brief new introduction, author and screenwriter Cousineau discusses Campbell's continuing impact on individuals from every walk of life. Annotation (c) Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)
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The Heroes Journey Joseph Campbell on His Life and Work The World of Joseph Campbell by Joseph Campbell ( 1991)
Contains interviews, lectures, and conversations exploring Campbell's ideas about mythology, religion, psychology, art, and the journey of the hero.
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Historical Atlas of World Mythology by Joseph Campbell ( 1989)
Compares and contrasts the themes of myths and legends in different cultures around the world.
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Historical Atlas of World Mythology The Way of the Animal Powers, Mythologies of the Primative Hunters & Gatherers by Joseph Campbell ( 1993) |
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History Atlas of World Myth by Joseph Campbell ( 2006) |
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In All Her Names Explorations of the Feminine in Divinity by Joseph Campbell ( 1991)
A collection of essays on the Goddess by Joseph Campbell, Marija Gimbutas, Riane Eisler, and Charles Muses.
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The Inner Journey Myth, Psyche, and Spirit by ( 2008) |
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The Inner Reaches of Outer Space Metaphor As Myth and As Religion by Joseph Campbell ( 1988)
Examines the relevance of mythology, its metaphorical archetypes, and the use of these images in art.
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Inward Journey Vol 2 East and West by Joseph Campbell ( 1997)
Presents key lectures on myth, symbolism, and spiritual awakening.
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Joseph Campbell Follow Your Bliss Conversations With Bill Moyers by Joseph Campbell, Bill D. Moyers ( 1989) |
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Joseph Campbell Follow Your Bliss 2009 Calendar by Joseph Campbell ( 2008) |
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Joseph Campbell Collection Western Quest by Joseph Campbell ( 1999)
From the work that brought him to national prominence to the key lectures he kept in his own study, this volume is an important piece of The Joseph Campbell Audio Collection and presents listeners with his timeless wisdom, provocative insights, and terrific stories.
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Joseph Campbell Companion Reflections on the Art of Living by Joseph Campbell, Diane K. Osbon ( 1991)
The celebrated scholar Joseph Campbell shares personal revelations and intimate reflections on the art of living in this beautifully packaged first book in a new series to be based on his unpublished writings. Two-color printing throughout.
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Joseph Campbell and the Power of Myth by Joseph Campbell ( 2001)
The complete soundtrack from the legendary PBS series explores the common themes that underlie diverse religions of Eastern and Western cultures.
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Joseph Campbell and the Power of Myth With Bill Moyer Program Six Masks of Eternity by Joseph Campbell ( 1993)
The acclaimed author of The Hero With a Thousand Faces joins Bill Moyers for a discussion of the various conceptions of God--"masks of eternity"--that can be found throughout the world.
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Joseph Campbell and the Power of Myth With Bill Moyer, Program Two The Message of the Myth/Cassette by Joseph Campbell, Bill D. Moyers ( 1993)
Comparing the biblical creation story of Genesis with creation stories from other world mythologies, Campbell explains how myths offer clues to the spiritual potential and meaning of human life.
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Joseph Campbell and the Power of Myth With Bill Moyers Program Four Sacrifice and Bliss/Program 4 by Joseph Campbell ( 1993)
A series of conversations between Joseph Campbell and Bill Moyers explores the importance of the sacrifice theme in mythology, as well as the concept of the "follow your bliss" philosophy.
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Joseph Campbell and the Power of Myth With Bill Moyers Program Five Love and the Goddess/Cassette by Joseph Campbell ( 1993)
Joseph Campbell joins Bill Moyers in a discussion of the diverse ways in which Western mythology's celebration of romance has transformed love, rather than faith, into "the burning point of life."
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Joseph Campbell and the Power of Myth With Bill Moyers, Program One The Hero's Adventure/Cassettes by Joseph Campbell, Bill D. Moyers ( 1993)
Joseph Campbell and Bill Moyers discuss the role of the hero in world mythology and the meaning of the heroic journey in terms of listeners' own lives.
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Joseph Campbell and the Power of Myth With Bill Moyers, Program Three The First Storytellers by Joseph Campbell, Bill Moyer ( 1993)
Campbell and Moyers discuss how modern society has turned away from the myths and rituals used by diverse world cultures to create harmony between body and mind.
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The Language of the Goddess by Marija Gimbutas ( 2001)
In this richly illustrated volume, the noted archaeologist and prehistorian Marija Gimbutas brings prepatriarchal civilization to life. A pioneer in archaeomythology--the interdisciplinary field based on archaeology, comparative mythology, and folklore--Gimbutas unequivocally establishes the existence of a goddess religion in Neolithic Europe with its roots in the Paleolithic. Through the interpretation of images and symbols, she reveals these matriarchal cultures, decoding the symbolic language that has remained embedded in our civilization. Illustrated with nearly 2,000 symbolic artifacts--sculptures, figurines, temple models, frescoes, vases, sacrificial containers--the book establishes the Goddess as the most persistent feature in the archaeological record of the ancient world. A symbol of the unity of all life in nature, her power was in water and stone, in cave and tomb, in animals and birds, in hills, trees, and flowers. Her main functions were life-giving, death-wielding, and regenerative. Gimbutas's magnum opus takes the existence of goddess-worshiping, earth-centered, egalitarian, and nonviolent cultures out of the realm of speculation into that of documented fact. Foreword by Joseph Campbell. 526 illustrations.
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Man and Myth by Joseph Campbell ( 1998)
From the "Star Wars" saga to the lyrics of the Grateful Dead, Joseph Campbell has had a profound impact on our culture, our beliefs, and the way we view ourselves and the world. Whether you were captivated by "The Power of Myth" or you're just now discovering "the man with a thousand stories", these early lectures are a must. April 1998 publication date.
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Man and Time Papers from the Eranos Yearbooks by ( 1983) |
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Man and Time Papers from the Eranos Yearbooks by ( 1983) |
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Masks of Eternity by Joseph Campbell ( 1990) |
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Masks of God by Joseph Campbell ( 1959) |
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The Masks of God Oriental Mythology by Joseph Campbell ( 1962) |
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The Masks of God Creative Mythology by Joseph Campbell ( 1991)
The author of such acclaimed books as Hero With a Thousand Faces and The Power of Myth discusses the primitive roots of mythology, examining them in light of the most recent discoveries in archaeology, anthropology, and psychology.
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Masks of God Creative Mythology by Joseph Campbell ( 1995)
The whole inner story of modern culture since the Dark Ages, treating modern man's unique position as the creator of his own mythology.
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The Masks of God Occidental Mythology by Joseph Campbell ( 1991)
Campbell offers a systematic and fascinating comparison of the themes that underlie the art, worship, and literature of the Western world. "The high function of Occidental myth and ritual . . . is to establish a means of relationship--of God to Man and Man to God".--Joseph Campbell.
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Masquerade The Mask As Art by Joseph Campbell, Maurice Tuchman ( 1993) |
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Los Mitos En El Tiempo by Joseph Campbell ( 2002) |
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The Mountainy Singer by Joseph Campbell ( 1981) |
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Myth and Metaphor in Society A Conversation With Joseph Campbell and Jamake Highwater by Joseph Campbell ( 2002) |
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The Mythic Dimension Selected Essays 19591987 by Joseph Campbell ( 2007)
Twelve eclectic essays on the topics of myth, culture, and history offer insight into the writer's perspectives on the connection between myth and the daily world as well as the influences of such sources as Thomas Mann, Freud, and the Grateful Dead on his writing.
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The Mythic Image by Joseph Campbell ( 1997)
Joseph Campbell presents art and images from many cultures and examines their relation to myth.
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Mythic Imagination by Joseph Campbell ( 2009) |
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Mythic Worlds, Modern Words On the Art of James Joyce by Joseph Campbell, Edmund L. Epstein, Joseph Campbell Foundation ( 2004)
Joseph Campbell's groundbreaking 1927 meditations on James Joyce's Ulysses are published for the first time, revealing fascinating secrets that will delight both Campbell and Joyce fans, including writings, lectures, and other commentaries on Joyce.
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Mythology and the Individual by Joseph Campbell ( 1996)
Presents key lectures on myth, symbolism, and spiritual awakening.
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The Myths and Masks of God by Joseph Campbell ( 1998)
Never before on audio and authorized by the Joseph Campbell Foundation, here is Volume Five of what will be a 40-hour series. These are the key lectures that Campbell kept in his study and used as the basis for later lectures on myth, symbolism, and spiritual awakening. Powerful and provocative, this program contains "Interpreting Symbolic Forms", "On the Experience of God", "Mythic Visions", "The Romantic Impulse", and "Imagination and Inquiry".
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Myths and Symbols in Indian Art and Civilization by Heinrich Zimmer ( 1972)
This book interprets for the Western mind the key motifs of India's legends, myth, and folklore, taken from the Sanskrit, and illustrated with seventy plates of Indian Art. It is primarily an introduction to image-thinking and picture-reading in Indian art and thought, and it seeks to make the profound Hindu and Buddhist intuitions of the riddles of life and death recognizable not merely as Oriental but as universal elements.
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Myths of Light Eastern Metaphors of the Eternal by David Kudler, Joseph Campbell ( 2003) |
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Myths to Live by by Joseph Campbell ( 1993)
Campbell explores how we can recreate ancient legends in our daily lives to release human potential.
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Myths, Dreams, and Religion Eleven Visions of Connection by ( 2000) |
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Myths, Dreams, and Religion by Joseph Campbell ( 1988) |
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Neil Gaiman's the Sandman and Joseph Campbell In Search of the Modern Myth by Joseph Campbell, Stephen Rauch ( 2003) |
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Occidental Mythology by Joseph Campbell ( 1976) |
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An Open Life Joseph Campbell in Conversation With Michael Toms by Joseph Campbell, Michael Toms, Dennie Briggs, John M. Maher ( 1990)
In the tradition of The Power of Myth, a conversation with Joseph Campbell that distills the mature wisdom and eclectic spiritual thinking of the world-renowned scholar and mythologist.
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Papers from Eranos Yearbooks The Mysteries by Joseph Campbell ( 1955) |
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Pathways To Bliss Mythology And Personal Transformation by Joseph Campbell, David Kudler ( 2004)
The author of The Hero with a Thousand Faces applies the collective wisdom of mythology to everyday life, making connections among ancient symbols, modern art, mental illness, and the journey of the Hero, all with characteristic wit and insight.
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Philosophies of India by Joseph Campbell, H Zimmer ( 1969)
Examines the diverse cultural influences which have shaped the basic philosophical traditions of India.
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Portable Jung by Joseph Campbell, Carl Gustav Jung ( 1976)
Joseph Campbell edited this collection of Carl Jung's writings as a primer on the work of Jung. Well represented in lengthy excerpts are Jung's work on the collective unconscious, the ego, and psychological types, as well as works that one might classify as "occult" or spiritual, such as "Individual Dream Symbolism in Relation to Alchemy" and "On Synchronicity". In his preface, Campbell states his intention that the reader of "The Portable Jung" will come away with an understanding of analytic philosophy and "a new realization of the relevance of the mythic lore of all peoples to his own psychological OPUS MAGNUM of the imagination."
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The Power of Myth by Joseph Campbell, Bill D. Moyers ( 1988)
The Power Of Myth launched an extraordinary resurgence of interest in Joseph Campbell and his work. A preeminient scholar, writer, and teacher, he has had a profound influence on millions of people. To him, mythology was the "song of the universe, the music of the spheres." With Bill Moyers, one of America's most prominent journalists, as his thoughtful and engaing interviewer, The Power Of Myth touches on subjects from modern marriage to virgin births, from Jesus to John Lennon, offering a brilliantcombination of intelligence and wit.
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Primitive Mythology by Joseph Campbell ( 1976) |
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Renewal Myths and Rites of the Primitive Hunters and Planters by Joseph Campbell ( 1989) |
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The Rush-Light by Joseph Campbell ( 2008) |
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Sake & Satori Asian Journals, Japan by Joseph Campbell ( 2002)
In this second volume of his Asian journals, Campbell reports on his travels through east Asia and his five-month stay in Japan. Sake and Satori includes the never-before-published sequel to Campbell's Baksheesh and Brahman and covers the author's journeys through Thailand, Cambodia, Burma, Hong Kong, Taiwan, and Japan. It offers a snapshot of 1950s Asia and its rapidly changing postcolonial and Cold War tensions. Campbell shares his experiences with Noh drama, Kabuki theater, and geisha houses, and explores how Asia absorbs and resists Western notions of gender, pluralism, and wealth. He relates conversations with fellow travelers, scholars, and Japanese people from all walks of life. Along the way, his asides develop into philosophical explorations augmented with photos and drawings.
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Short Stories by Patrick Pearse ( 2009) |
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A Skeleton Key To Finnegans Wake Unlocking James Joyce's Masterwork by Joseph Campbell, Edmund L. Epstein, Henry Morton Robinson ( 2005) |
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A Skeleton Key to Finnegans Wake by Joseph Campbell ( 1986)
A guide to reading James Joyce's most difficult work. Campbell, a scholar of myth and follower of Jung, reads "Finnegans Wake" as an expression of the collective unconscious.
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Spirit and Nature by Bollingen Foundation Collection (Library of Congress) ( 1982) |
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Spiritual Disciplines Papers from the Eranos Yearbooks by ( 1985)
Papers From the Eranos Yearbooks. Distinguished scholars from Europe, Asia, and America have been invited to a 'shared feast' and have lectured on themes chosen by the Director of Eranos, the late Olga Froebe-Kapteyn.
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Spiritual Disciplines by Joseph Campbell ( 1960) |
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Tarot Revelations by Joseph Campbell, Richard Roberts ( 1987) |
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This Business of the Gods by Joseph Campbell ( 1992) |
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Thou Art That Transforming Religious Metaphor by Eugene C. Kennedy, Joseph Campbell ( 2001)
A series of previously uncollected essays by the father of modern mythology focuses on religious symbolism, guiding readers through the metaphors and meanings most appropriate to the contemporary world.
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Transformations of Myth Through Time by Joseph Campbell ( 1990)
The renowned master of mythology is at his warm, accessible, and brilliant best in this illustrated collection of thirteen lectures covering mythological development around the world.
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The Universal Myths Heroes, Gods, Tricksters and Others by Mircea Eliade, Joseph Campbell, Alexander Eliot ( 1990)
A comprehensive presentation of the great themes and images of the myths of cultures around the globe and the significance of myth in the history of religion.
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The Way of Art by Joseph Campbell ( 1990) |
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The Way of Myth Talking With Joseph Campbell by Joseph Campbell, Fraser Boa ( 1994)
Joseph Campbell has done more than any other scholar to bring the meaning and power of mythology to a popular audience, and "The Way of Myth" presents him at his best. Drawn from a series of inspiring conversations recorded shortly before his death in 1987, the book covers a wide range of topics, such as the difference between Eastern and Western beliefs in God and nature, the importance of the Mother Goddess in our time, spiritual freedom, and what myth tells us about the stages of life.
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The Way of the Animal Powers Historical Atlas of World Mythology by Joseph Campbell ( 1983)
An acclaimed authority on world mythology draws on mythology, anthropology, archaeology, ethnology, and other disciplines to reconstruct the social and cultural patterns and the beliefs of primitive hunting-and-gathering peoples.
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Way of the Animal Powers, Part 2 Mythologies of the Great Hunt by Joseph Campbell ( 1988) |
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Way of the Seeded Earth Mythologies of the Primitive Planters/Part 2 by Joseph Campbell ( 1994) |
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The Way of the Seeded Earth Mythologies of the Primitive Planters The Middle and Southern Amer/Part 3 by Joseph Campbell ( 1989)
Compares and contrasts the themes of myths and legends in different cultures around the world.
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Way of the Seeded Earth, Part 1 The Sacrifice by Joseph Campbell ( 1988) |
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Where the Two Came to Their Father A Navaho War Ceremonial by Joseph Campbell, Jeff King, Maud Oakes, Bollingen Foundation Collection (Library of Congress) ( 1969) |
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The Wisdom Of Joseph Campbell In Conversation With Michael Toms by Joseph Campbell ( 1997) |
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