论罗西的女神(约瑟夫·坎贝尔选集)

Q1 Arts and Humanities Storytelling, Self, Society Pub Date : 2014-10-01 DOI:10.13110/storselfsoci.10.2.0252
D. Slattery
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The editor, Dr. Safron Rossi, a former mythological studies student at Pacifica Graduate Institute and now curator of the OPUS Archives and associate core faculty member at the institute, has performed a magnificent service in both idea and execution by gathering Campbell's lectures, essays, and informal talks into one volume. In its 300 pages, the volume celebrates Campbell's abiding and enduring interest in and fascination with the Goddess tradition, its mythohistorical legacy, and its voice in literary classics of the Middle Ages.The eight substantial and often beautifully illustrated chapters, with artworks that include ceramics, paintings, sculptures, reliefs, engravings, and sketches from around the globe, gather a range of feminine divine presences across time and space. For example, consider the following: \"Chapter 1. Myth and the Feminine Divine\"; \"Chapter 2. Goddess-Mother Creator: Neolithic and Early Bronze Age\"; \"Chapter 4. Sumerian and Egyptian Goddesses\"; \"Chapter 6. Iliad and Odyssey: Return to the Goddess\"; \"Chapter 8. Amor: The Feminine in European Romance.\" The brief appendix contains Campbell's foreword to Marija Gimbutas's Language of the Goddess as well as a list of \"Essential Reading\" on the Goddess's presence in a variety of disciplines.As many readers of Campbell's ample corpus know, he is a comparative mythologist who works best within what I would call the \"analogical imagination.\" He seeks similarities within forests of difference; words that I have found to describe his \"mythodology\" include \"in accord with,\" \" similar to,\" \"like,\" and \"corresponds to,\" to name a few. His method calls to mind C. G. Jung's provocative insight that \"analogy formation is a law which to a large extent governs the psyche\" (par. 414). Campbell generally adheres to this principle as a guide through the whirling motions of world mythologies over time. The other staple to his method is his understanding of myths as energy fields, even transport vehicles, that allow the individual and culture to move to a place where one or both may become transparent to transcendence. His move is always toward the invisible but palpable presences that undergird and give shape and form to the time-bound phenomenal world. In his imagination, the images of the Goddess have served humankind in just that way for millennia, however much they seem to have been lost, deconstructed, or decentered from the individual or collective psyche: \"The object venerated,\" he asserts, \"is a personification of an energy that dwells within the individual, and the reference of mythology has two modes-that of consciousness and that of the spiritual potentials within the individual\" (14).Furthermore, as we track his phenomenological exploration of Goddess imagery, we recognize him working the image as one would the imagery of a poem. In fact, it is well to recall his fundamental belief of the Goddess's presence: \"People often think of the Goddess as a fertility deity only. Not at all-she's the muse. She's the inspirer of poetry. She's the inspirer of the spirit\" (37). Most always, what myths lead Campbell to repeatedly proclaim is that they are manifestations in time and space of the timeless realm of spirit. …","PeriodicalId":39019,"journal":{"name":"Storytelling, Self, Society","volume":"10 1","pages":"252"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2014-10-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://sci-hub-pdf.com/10.13110/storselfsoci.10.2.0252","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"On Rossi’s Goddesses (Collected Works of Joseph Campbell)\",\"authors\":\"D. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

论罗西的女神(约瑟夫·坎贝尔选集)女神:女性神圣的奥秘。在《约瑟夫·坎贝尔作品集》中,由萨夫伦·伊丽莎白·罗西编辑。诺瓦托,加利福尼亚州:新世界图书馆,2013。304页。ISBN: 1608681823。布24.05美元。永恒的女性吸引着我们。——歌德围绕约瑟夫·坎贝尔出版的大量书籍(现在有DVD了),有许多批评意见认为他似乎把女性排除在《英雄之旅》之外。他的一些读者甚至认为他将女性排除在他一生探索世界神话所构建的神话万神殿之外。在这本新书《女神:女性神性的奥秘》中,许多这样的批评可能会被淡化或调整,或者至少被重新审视和修改。这本书的编辑是萨夫隆·罗西博士,他曾是太平洋研究所神话学专业的学生,现在是OPUS档案馆的馆长,也是该研究所的副核心教员。他把坎贝尔的演讲、散文和非正式谈话收集在一起,在思想和执行上都做出了了不起的贡献。在它的300页中,这本书颂扬了坎贝尔对女神传统、神话历史遗产和中世纪文学经典的持久兴趣和迷恋。这八章内容丰富,插图精美,艺术品包括陶瓷、绘画、雕塑、浮雕、雕刻和草图,来自世界各地,收集了一系列跨越时间和空间的女性神圣存在。例如,考虑以下内容:“第1章。神话与女性神”;“第二章。女神-母亲创造者:新石器时代和早期青铜时代”;“第四章。苏美尔和埃及女神”;“第六章。《伊利亚特与奥德赛:回归女神》;“第八章。《爱:欧洲浪漫中的女性》简短的附录包含了Campbell对Marija Gimbutas的《女神的语言》的前言,以及一份关于女神在各种学科中的存在的“基本阅读”清单。正如坎贝尔丰富的语料库的许多读者所知,他是一位比较神话学家,在我称之为“类比想象”的领域里做得最好。他在差异的森林中寻找相似之处;我发现描述他的“神话”的词包括“与……一致”、“与……相似”、“像……”和“对应于……”等等。他的方法让人想起了荣格(c.g. Jung)颇具煽动性的见解,即“类比形成是一种在很大程度上支配心灵的法则”(第414页)。坎贝尔通常坚持这一原则,作为世界神话随时间旋转运动的指南。他的方法的另一个主要内容是他对神话的理解,神话是能量场,甚至是交通工具,它允许个人和文化移动到一个地方,在那里一个或两个可能变得透明超越。他的行动总是朝向那些无形但可触摸的存在,这些存在巩固并赋予了受时间限制的现象世界以形状和形式。在他的想象中,女神的形象已经以这种方式为人类服务了几千年,尽管它们似乎已经从个人或集体的心灵中丢失、解构或偏离了很多:“受尊敬的对象,”他断言,“是居住在个人内部的能量的人格化,神话的参考有两种模式——意识和个人内部的精神潜力”(14)。此外,当我们追踪他对女神意象的现象学探索时,我们认识到他像对待诗歌意象一样对待女神意象。事实上,回顾一下他对女神存在的基本信念是很好的:“人们常常认为女神只是一个生育之神。一点也不,她是缪斯女神。她是诗歌的灵感来源。她是精神的鼓舞者”(37)。通常,神话引导坎贝尔反复宣称的是,它们是永恒的精神领域在时间和空间中的表现。…
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On Rossi’s Goddesses (Collected Works of Joseph Campbell)
On Rossi's Goddesses (Collected Works of Joseph Campbell) Goddesses: Mysteries of the Feminine Divine. In the Collected Works of Joseph Campbell, edited by Safron Elsabeth Rossi. Novato, CA: New World Library, 2013. 304 pp. ISBN: 1608681823. Cloth $24.05.The Eternal feminine is what draws us on.-GoetheOne of a number of critiques that continues to swirl around Joseph Campbell's massive library of books he has published (and now available on DVD) is that he appears to leave the feminine out of the Hero's Journey. Some of his readers have gone so far as to suggest that he leaves the feminine out of the mythic pantheon that he constructed over a lifetime of exploring world mythologies.In this new book, Goddesses: Mysteries of the Feminine Divine, much of such criticism might be muted or modulated or, at the very least, revisited and revised. The editor, Dr. Safron Rossi, a former mythological studies student at Pacifica Graduate Institute and now curator of the OPUS Archives and associate core faculty member at the institute, has performed a magnificent service in both idea and execution by gathering Campbell's lectures, essays, and informal talks into one volume. In its 300 pages, the volume celebrates Campbell's abiding and enduring interest in and fascination with the Goddess tradition, its mythohistorical legacy, and its voice in literary classics of the Middle Ages.The eight substantial and often beautifully illustrated chapters, with artworks that include ceramics, paintings, sculptures, reliefs, engravings, and sketches from around the globe, gather a range of feminine divine presences across time and space. For example, consider the following: "Chapter 1. Myth and the Feminine Divine"; "Chapter 2. Goddess-Mother Creator: Neolithic and Early Bronze Age"; "Chapter 4. Sumerian and Egyptian Goddesses"; "Chapter 6. Iliad and Odyssey: Return to the Goddess"; "Chapter 8. Amor: The Feminine in European Romance." The brief appendix contains Campbell's foreword to Marija Gimbutas's Language of the Goddess as well as a list of "Essential Reading" on the Goddess's presence in a variety of disciplines.As many readers of Campbell's ample corpus know, he is a comparative mythologist who works best within what I would call the "analogical imagination." He seeks similarities within forests of difference; words that I have found to describe his "mythodology" include "in accord with," " similar to," "like," and "corresponds to," to name a few. His method calls to mind C. G. Jung's provocative insight that "analogy formation is a law which to a large extent governs the psyche" (par. 414). Campbell generally adheres to this principle as a guide through the whirling motions of world mythologies over time. The other staple to his method is his understanding of myths as energy fields, even transport vehicles, that allow the individual and culture to move to a place where one or both may become transparent to transcendence. His move is always toward the invisible but palpable presences that undergird and give shape and form to the time-bound phenomenal world. In his imagination, the images of the Goddess have served humankind in just that way for millennia, however much they seem to have been lost, deconstructed, or decentered from the individual or collective psyche: "The object venerated," he asserts, "is a personification of an energy that dwells within the individual, and the reference of mythology has two modes-that of consciousness and that of the spiritual potentials within the individual" (14).Furthermore, as we track his phenomenological exploration of Goddess imagery, we recognize him working the image as one would the imagery of a poem. In fact, it is well to recall his fundamental belief of the Goddess's presence: "People often think of the Goddess as a fertility deity only. Not at all-she's the muse. She's the inspirer of poetry. She's the inspirer of the spirit" (37). Most always, what myths lead Campbell to repeatedly proclaim is that they are manifestations in time and space of the timeless realm of spirit. …
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Storytelling, Self, Society
Storytelling, Self, Society Arts and Humanities-Literature and Literary Theory
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