ShinShinKid » Thu Jun 27, 2013 4:03 pm wrote:I've been keeping as up-to-date as I can. I tend to tune out some of the all caps screaming, the repeated links, and responses to said screaming and links.
I have seen more than one interview with Campbell, in my college days and a little more recently.
Is it possible to be so polished as to not come off as someone you are not? Of course it is. Politicians, actors, even we do it all the time. I would like to argue that every time we go out into society, even interact with family, we are, in the words of the great Thespian, "Acting!"
That is fodder for another thread, though.
Okay, so you focused in on the part where I said there was arguing, how about his take on his extensive travels in Japan? The only things I've found, as I've said, read like twitter before twitter was kewl.
Do you have access to his journals whereby we can see some actual journaling in the form of his interviewee personality. I guess what I am saying is that I am not able to find a journal entry that sounds anything like how he writes or presents. No biggie dah. We can all have our opinions and go our ways and be happy, right? At least, that's the hope!

You can go to this library ......they have all his writings...page 3 of this thread
A Legend in His Own Right : A library in Carpinteria is devoted to the legacy of Joseph Campbell, who celebrated myth and spirituality.
October 07, 1993|SUE REILLY
"Don't Myth With Joe Campbell."
New York City bumper sticker circa 1960s.
The late Joseph Campbell was a mythologist of mythical proportions.
Though a reluctant guru, Campbell's high-intensity lectures and television appearances turned him into a pin-up for the pop-culture set.
Campbell Archives--An article Oct. 7 in Ventura County Life made several misstatements concerning Pacifica Graduate Institute and the Joseph Campbell Archives and Library. The library is not part of the institute but is held and administered by the Center for the Study of Depth Psychology, an independent nonprofit corporation. According to Pacifica President Stephen Aizenstat, the school has state approval to grant graduate degrees but is not accredited. It is, Aizenstat said, in the process of applying for accreditation through a regional accreditation association.
He shared ideas with everyone from Carl Jung to John Steinbeck to the Indian mystic Jiddu Krishnamurti, and once appeared onstage with the Grateful Dead.
A lapsed Catholic whose life became a mystical journey, he rummaged around in everyone's psychic baggage and concluded that we were all carrying around the same basic stuff.
The guiding idea behind his work, he once said, was to find in all world myths a common spiritual principal. You're talking about a search for the meaning of life? he was asked.
"No, no, no," Campbell replied, "for the experience of being alive, of the heroic journey through life."
This concept attracted a legion of fans, including Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis, Steven Spielberg, George Lucas and Pat Riley, to his books and television appearances. The most famous of the latter are the Bill Moyers tapes.
Campbell spent a great deal of time in 1987 taping a series that, when edited down, amounted to six hours of television and attracted an estimated 35 million viewers.
According to Moyers, who moderated the PBS series, the shows' ratings went through the roof and caused the sale of Campbell's many books to soar.
Ironically, the acclaim came several months after Campbell died of cancer and created a huge but often conflicting legacy.
Some scorned him as a shoddy scholar and even a bigot. More specialized academics called him a popularizer who couldn't keep his curiosity in any particular intellectual corner.
His defenders saw him as an original thinker whose ideas carry the key to an enriched life and universal understanding. They said the attacks were a product of the jealousy that accompanies renown.
Everyone seemed to agree on one thing, however: As a storyteller, he could spellbind more skillfully than an evangelist warming up for Judgment Day. His personal vigor was a trademark, and it was present almost to his last hours.
On Oct. 30, 1987, when the 83-year-old Campbell died at his home in Honolulu, he left his words and ideas, as well as a personal library of 5,000 books and a collection of letters, photographs and personal possessions.
Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
Don’t forget that.