Results for the term... "woman"
Results from the Collected Works of Joseph Campbell
Results from the Collected Lectures of Joseph Campbell
Results from the Quotations of Joseph Campbell
- I always feel uncomfortable when people speak about ordinary mortals because I've never met an ordinary man, woman or child.
- It may well be that a good deal of what has been advertised as representing the will of “Old Man” actually is but the heritage of a lot of old men, and that the main idea has been not so much to honor God as to simplify life by keeping woman in the kitchen.
- Pandora is another inflection of the idea of the woman who brings bounty into the world. The later, smart aleck, masculine-inflected story of Pandora—the notion that every woman brings with her a box of troubles—is simply another way of saying that all life is sorrowful. Of course, trouble comes with life; as soon as you have movement in time, you have sorrows and disasters. Where there is bounty, there is suffering.
- Many traditional societies regard magic as being originally the woman’s possession and the men have stolen it or taken it from them because it’s a woman’s thing.
Results from the Myth Blasts of Joseph Campbell
- Archetypal-Mechanics from an Unseen Aid
- Blowing Up the Binary: Beyond Feminine and Masculine
- Cunneware’s Laugh: The Enticement of Delight
- Dreams, Images of the Feminine, and the Venus of Laussel: What Paleolithic Venuses Tells Us Today
- Engaging The Renewing Feminine Within
- Love, Lovers, and Choices
- 70 Years of the Hero’s Journey
- El Niño Dios, the Goddess, and the Cross
- Flowers, Death, and the Mythology of Horror Films: A Midsommar Night’s Dream
- From the Great Mother to the Age of Belief: Campbell on the Mythologies of Europe & the Middle East
- Juno: Not Everyone Knows How to Love the Terrifying, Strange, or Beautiful
- Love of a Higher Order
- Love: The Burning Point of Life
- Mysteries of the Feminine Divine
- Myth, Campbell & Film
- Myths We Love By
- Penelope’s Loom
- Re-membering: A Mythopoetic Interpretation of The Handless Maiden
- Renaissance
- Separation, Initiation, and Return
- Strictly Platonic: The Clash Between Education and Sports
- The Dark Light of the Goddess
- The Flowering of the Feminine Divine
- The Song of the Quest
- The Wedding of Dame Ragnell and Sir Gawain
- Skywoman’s Sacred Creative Power
- Storytelling and the Priestcraft of Art
- The Fires of Love-Death
- The River Erdman
- The Serpent Flowering
- The Star as a Sign: From Pandora’s Box and Bethlehem to the Present
- The Star of the Archetypal Imagination
- The Trobairitz: How Access to Power Unfurls Creative Expression
- Thinking at the Edges of Joseph Campbell: The Future of the MythBlast Series
- To The Female God of the Labyrinth
Results from the Mythological Resources of Joseph Campbell
- Archetypal Figures in “The Snows of Kilimanjaro”: Hemingway on Flight and Hospitality
- Braiding Sweetgrass, by Robin Wall Kimmerer
- Eleusis: Archetypal Image of Mother and Daughter
- Goddesses for Every Day: Exploring the Wisdom and Power of the Divine Feminine around the World
- Goddesses in Everywoman: Powerful Archetypes in Women’s Lives
- Lady of the Lotus-Born: The Life and Enlightenment of Yeshe Tsogyal
- One Woman’s Mind
- Pagan Meditations: The Worlds of Aphrodite, Artemis, and Hestia
- Rabbit Ears Treasury of Fairy Tales and Other Stories
- Radio Documentary: The Hero’s Journey: A Guide To Life?
- She: Understanding Feminine Psychology
- The Goddess: Mythological Images of the Feminine
- The ManKind Project
- The Origins of the World’s Mythologies
- Women Who Run with the Wolves: Myths and Stories of the Wild Woman Archetype