Juho Pohjalainen's Reviews > The Hero With a Thousand Faces

The Hero With a Thousand Faces by Joseph Campbell
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it was amazing

I've been well aware of the Hero's Journey for many years now, known of its vast influences in stories and storytelling both mythical and modern, read and re-read its key points and meanings, and applied them in my stories. Now at last I thought it might be a good idea to read them straight from the source and see if I could scrape up any more of them out of it.

Can't say I expected anything quite like this.

The book has a great deal to say not just about myths and stories and how eerily similar they are, but also of the underlying philosophies, dreams, religion, psychology, society, and what it means to be a hero in the modern day. It talks a lot about how we came to be, how we grew up to end up the way we are now, and identifies with often uncanny accuracy some of the key problems of our present-day society, and just why so many of us now seem to drift along the currents of life with no purpose nor satisfaction. It's a deep and insightful piece of work that still radiates well today... well, save for the stuff about dreams and Freud, all of which I'm fairly sure have since turned out to be false.

Also, it gave me a lot of really great old stories that I'd never even heard of and that I probably should at some point get around to reading.
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Quotes Juho Liked

Joseph Campbell
“Instead of clearing his own heart the zealot tries to clear the world.”
Joseph Campbell, The Hero with a Thousand Faces

Joseph Campbell
“The agony of breaking through personal limitations is the agony of spiritual growth. Art, literature, myth and cult, philosophy, and ascetic disciplines are instruments to help the individual past his limiting horizons into spheres of ever-expanding realization. As he crosses threshold after threshold, conquering dragon after dragon, the stature of the divinity that he summons to his highest wish increases, until it subsumes the cosmos. Finally, the mind breaks the bounding sphere of the cosmos to a realization transcending all experiences of form - all symbolizations, all divinities: a realization of the ineluctable void.”
Joseph Campbell, The Hero With a Thousand Faces

Joseph Campbell
“Once we have broken free of the prejudices of our own provincially limited ecclesiastical, tribal, or national rendition of the world archetypes, it becomes possible to understand that the supreme initiation is not that of the local motherly fathers, who then project aggression onto the neighbors for their own defense. The good news, which the World Redeemer brings and which so many have been glad to hear, zealous to preach, but reluctant, apparently, to demonstrate, is that God is love, the He can be, and is to be, loved, and that all without exception are his children. Such comparatively trivial matters as the remaining details of the credo, the techniques of worship, and devices of episcopal organization (which have so absorbed the interest of Occidental theologians that they are today seriously discussed as the principal questions of religion), are merely pedantic snares, unless kept ancillary to the major teaching. Indeed, where not so kept, they have the regressive effect: they reduce the father image back again to the dimensions of the totem. And this, of course, is what has happened throughout the Christian world. One would think that we had been called upon to decide or to know whom, of all of us, the Father prefers. Whereas, the teaching is much less flattering: "Judge not, that ye be not judged." The World Savior's cross, in spite of the behavior of its professed priests, is a vastly more democratic symbol than the local flag.”
Joseph Campbell, The Hero With a Thousand Faces

Joseph Campbell
“The hero of yesterday becomes the tyrant of tomorrow, unless he crucifies himself today.”
Joseph Campbell, The Hero With a Thousand Faces

Joseph Campbell
“And so every one of us shares the supreme ordeal —carries the cross of the redeemer— not in the bright moments of his tribe's great victories, but in the silences of his personal despair.”
Joseph Campbell, The Hero With a Thousand Faces


Reading Progress

June 20, 2019 – Started Reading
June 20, 2019 – Shelved
June 20, 2019 –
page 58
13.94%
June 21, 2019 –
page 100
24.04% "This book keeps on showing me little snippets about other stories, that make me want to read them all. It's like a book of teasers."
June 22, 2019 –
page 144
34.62% "I'm not sure about all this Freudian stuff and the dreams. Pretty sure it's all been debunked since.

I wonder what Campbell would've thought of my dream of being God and using the world as a football."
June 23, 2019 –
page 189
45.43% "

A lot of the stories I learn from this book are fucking metal."
June 24, 2019 –
page 245
58.89%
June 25, 2019 –
page 275
66.11%
June 25, 2019 –
page 336
80.77%
June 26, 2019 – Finished Reading

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