I just finished reading Joseph Campbell's The Hero with a Thousand Facesand I was thoroughly impressed.
I know it's an old book and if you've seen Star Wars you already know the hero arc but, to me, the most important part of the book wasn't explaining that all mythology is based on the same archetypes or the journey all heroes take. The most important part of the book was the Epilogue, "Myth and Society." In the epilogue Campbell talks explicitly about what mythology, religion, stories, and, more recently, movies are trying to teach us; the essence of which is that there is more to life than individualism. Instead of "Myth and
Society" the epilogue could have been named "Myth and
Socialism".
The society to which we belong moulds our lives; it gives us language and shapes our
thoughts. As an individual we cannot be representative of our society; we can only show facets of it, facets that change as we age and grow in experience.
One person cannot represent the young, the mature, and the old at the same time; a man cannot represent the feminine or genderless aspects of society; a scholar cannot represent other professions. Together, individuals in the society make up
the whole and our traditions and ceremonies serve to help us fit into the
society. Most ceremonies transition us
from one aspect of our life to the next: birth celebrations, such as a baptism;
coming-of-age ceremonies, such as Bar and Bat Mitzvah; weddings; funerals. Each of these show us and the community where
we belong in society. Other ceremonies
are about the community as a whole: Plough Monday was
the first day of the agricultural year in England, Thanksgiving is a
celebration of the harvest made possible only through the work of the entire
society.
There are no
ceremonies in which we celebrate a person being an individual separate from
society. Some ceremonies, such as a vision quest, might
involve separation from the society but only for a period of time. Being permanently separated from society was
reserved as a punishment, typically for sever crimes. Cain was exiled for the murder of Abel1, in 16th Century Scotland those found acting against the interests of
the burgh were banished.2 Individual identity separate from society has
only recently been something sought after.
Myths reinforce the
idea that, as individuals, we are only part of the whole. As Jesus said, “Truly I tell you, whatever
you did for one of the least of these brothers and sisters of mine, you did for
me.”3
Or God’s words, “Muhammad hadst thou not been, I would not have created the sky.”4 Myths tell us that God is part of all of us
and that we are part of God; all people are interconnected and belong to the
whole. And yet in today’s world we are
removing all identification with groups and placing increasing emphasis on the
individual. As individuals we are lost;
we cannot grasp the fullness of life without a group and “we have been split in
two”, our conscious and unconscious selves.5
“We think of
ourselves as Americans, children of the twentieth century, Occidentals,
civilized Christians. We are virtuous or
sinful. Yet such designations do not
tell what it is to be man, they denote only the accidents of geography,
birth-date, and income. What is the core
of us? What is the basic character of our being?”6 We
are humankind; we are the past, the future, and each other. We are better off as a group. No single facet of humanity, not one
religion, or social class, or profession, or gender can represent all of
humanity. Further, no single nationality
or ethnicity can represent all of humankind.
As humanity has in the past, we must move beyond these limiting factors,
we must recognize that our society is global not tribal or provincial or
national. These labels hold humanity
back from maturing.
Religion is unable
to help us break away from the guardians of the status quo. Long ago religion became a tool of the
“ogre-tyrant,” used for propaganda and self-congratulation. “It is hardly more today than a sanctimonious
exercise for Sunday morning, whereas business ethics and patriotism stand for
the remainder of the week.” For proof we
need only look to the United States, it is an unofficial requirement that to
run for high office a person must be a Christian while also praising the system
that encourages a few to hoard while others go without.
This can also be seen in Buddhism, which is today a tool for the country
of Tibet. Gautama Buddha was a prince who cast off his material life
for enlightenment but the Dalai Lama has, until
recently, been the head of the Tibetan state and continually uses his religious
position for political purposes. We must
break free of these restrictive mythologies or be forever trapped in a cycle of
violence against each other.
A key part in
ending the cycle of violence is to discontinue our practice of Capitalism and our
belief in the ideologies and myths that have sprung up to support it. The profit motive is used to excuse violence
on all scales, from banks forcibly removing people from their homes to
countries warring on one another.
Capitalism is a belief predicated on violence and greed; it necessarily
stagnates humanity as it encourages uniformity, falsely portraying a single
facet of humanity as being representative of all.
We must all, as Campbell
points out, be modern day heroes7. It will, however, not be for society to guide
us in our journey but, rather, for each of us to bear the torch that will guide
us back to society. We must discover those
unconscious symbols that can serve as guideposts and help to create new
mythologies or reinterpret old ones that will guide those following us. We must become united in humanity. That is not to say we must all have a single
culture and use the same symbols and stories for enlightenment but we must
recognize that we are all engaged in the same journey; the path may be
different but the destination is the same: a global, respectful humanity.
1Gen. 4:11
2 Elizabeth Ewan, “'For Whatever Ales Ye': Women as
Consumers and Producers in Late Medieval Scottish Towns,” in Women in Scotland: c.1100-1750, 124-135, ed. Elizabeth Ewan and Maureen Meikle (East Linton: Tuckwell Press, 1999), 126-127.
3Matt. 25:40
4 Saʻdī, The Bústán, trans. W.H. Allen (1879), 13.
5 Joseph Campbell, The Hero with a Thousand Faces, 3rd ed. (Novato, California: New World Library, 2008), 334.
6 Ibid., 332.
7 Ibid., 337.