1 / 24

The Monomyth

The Monomyth. The Hero’s Journey. Joseph Campbell’s Monomyth. Monomyths (one myth) look surprising alike. A cyclical story Hero undergoes a transformation Offers a sacrifice to save the world. The cycle has multiple steps that most heroes follow.

jaden
Download Presentation

The Monomyth

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Monomyth The Hero’s Journey

  2. Joseph Campbell’s Monomyth • Monomyths (one myth) look surprising alike. • A cyclical story • Hero undergoes a transformation • Offers a sacrifice to save the world

  3. The cycle has multiple steps that most heroes follow. The hero learns the truth about his world and himself. The journey symbolizes the search for individual identity and the culture’s concept of the idealized member of society.

  4. The Broad Stages of the Monomyth • Departure (Separation) from the real world • Initiation into a symbolic, psychological shadow world • Return to the real world – with some kind of transformation that will help that world

  5. Departure (Separation) • Call to Adventure • Helpers/Amulets • The Crossing of the first Threshold • The Belly of the Whale

  6. The Call to Adventure • Hero is introduced • In a relatively safe place (though we recognize he cannot stay there forever). • The hero doesn’t fit or is ostracized, or danger is lurking. • Though we see some obvious good traits in our hero, he is also imperfect. • We recognize that he has some growing to do before we can accept him as an ideal member of society.

  7. Examples of the Call to Adventure

  8. The Lion King Simba in The Lion King is a rather doted upon and bratty prince, therefore he is imperfect – not our idealized concept of a hero, a productive member of society. We also see that the Pride Lands are not safe for him, since Scar is determined to remove Simba from the line of succession; therefore, the real world is only relatively safe for him – the danger of Scar is lurking.

  9. Other Examples of the Call to Adventure Dorothy in The Wizard of Oz - happy with Aunt Em, but the nasty old lady down the street wants to get rid of her dog, Toto.  Odysseus in The Odyssey - happy in Ithaca - is called to rescue Helen from Troy. cannot refuse the call, since he is a tributary king to Agamemnon who swore allegiance to Menelaus

  10. John Cotton in Bless the Beasts and Children - capable of being the leader of the Apache’s - as a Christ-figure, he chooses to gather the lesser people of the camp into his group. - he is safe, but the people he cares for are not - Note: Christ also follows the cycle of the monomyth, so of course, Cotton will as well.

  11. The Call to Adventure Begins • The Herald arrives • a character or event that entices the hero to leave his real world. • Hero may accept the invitation or he may refuse the call. • to achieve heroic status, he must accept the call, even if, like Frodo, it is an unwilling acceptance. 

  12. The Herald as an Event

  13. The Twister pulls Dorothy out of Kansas and lands her in the land of Oz • The Golden Apple incident forces Odysseus away from Ithaca

  14. In Bless the Beasts and Children both an event and character act as the Herald. - the slaughter of the buffalo (event) - Lally 2’s urging (character) forces Cotton to leave the camp to rescue the buffalo

  15. Helpers/Amulets

  16. hero encounters helpers, (inanimate and animate) • these help hero achieve his goal (saving his world) and help him find his sense of self

  17. Amulets (Inanimate helpers) magic device that confers supernatural power on Hero famous amulets - Dorothy’s shoes - Harry’s invisibility cloak - Odysseus’ bag of winds

  18. Characters (animate helpers) • either human or nonhuman • help Hero achieve goal. (Some of these characters may die in their efforts.) • helpers include • Timon and Pumbaa, • Tinman, Cowardly Lion, and Scarecrow • Goodenow, Lally brothers, Teft, etc.

  19. The Herald (Helper)

  20. a powerful mentor who helps the hero both physically and mentally. • Sometimes an ominous character that can be scary (Gandalf) • Heralds include • The Fairy Godmother in Cinderella • Rafiki in The Lion King • Glinda, The Good Witch of the North in The Wizard of Oz • Athena in The Odyssey

  21. The Steadfast Friend

  22. hero’s constant friend • keeps Hero’s spirits up and helps Hero stay focused on achieving the all-important goal • Well-known steadfast friends include • Sam Gamgee in The Lord of the Rings • Ron in The Harry Potter series • Toto in The Wizard of Oz

  23. The Corruptible Everyman

  24. fairly rare, character is quite important • symbolically represents flaws within the hero • starts out on the side of the hero, eventually betrays Hero • redeems itself by sacrificing itself for the hero or quest • Corruptible Everymen include: • Boromir from The Lord of the Rings • Judas from The New Testament • Judas Truck from Bless the Beasts and Children

More Related