The hero with a thousand faces

416 pages

English language

Published Nov. 10, 1972 by Princeton University Press.

ISBN:
978-0-691-01784-6
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OCLC Number:
2972015

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In this book, Joseph Campbell presents the composite hero. Apollo, the Frog King of the fairy tale, Wotan, the Buddha, and numerous other protagonists of folklore and religion, enact simultaneously the various phases of their common story. The psychological view is then compared with the words of such spiritual leaders as Moses, Jesus, Mohammed, Lao-tse, and the 'Old Men' of Australian tribes. From behind a thousand faces the single hero emerges, archetype of all myth.

8 editions

Review of 'The hero with a thousand faces' on 'Goodreads'

As the name suggests, this book is a synopsis of the basic personality of a hero (and the myth revolving around him) who can be identified across various cultures and mythologies with astonishing similarities. This is also a book of the idea of mythology how Joseph Campbell has seen.

Now, though Campbell himself is a believer, he can’t help but notice that the old world of gods and demons, magic and might is falling and a new era of science and technology has emerged. But as he justifiably lamented in power of myth, this new age had no powerful myth to support human through the generic darkness and existential crisis that almost everyone goes through. Nevertheless, this is not an apologist book to justify religion or faith, but a scholarly and pleasing journey through the world of myth.

In this book, Campbell used ideas from psychoanalysis heavily to predict the …

Review of 'The hero with a thousand faces' on 'LibraryThing'

Somewhat stilted and pedantic view of shared aspects of mythology. Jung did a much more engaging job of covering this topic.

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Subjects

  • Mythology
  • Psychoanalysis