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Great rules of thumb for learning to read Myth (or anything else remember.) Originally published in his work Myths to Live By
Joseph Campbell's Ten Commandments
for Reading Myth
- Read myths with the eyes of wonder:
the myths transparent to their universal meaning,
their meaning transparent to its mysterious source.
- Read myths in the present tense: Eternity is now.
- Read myths in the first person plural: the Gods and Goddesses
of ancient mythology still live within you.
- Any myth worth its salt exerts a powerful magnetism. Notice
the images and stories that you are drawn to and repelled by.
Investigate the field of associated images and stories.
- Look for patterns; don't get lost in the details.
What is needed is not more specialized scholarship,
but more interdisciplinary vision. Make connections;
break old patterns of parochial thought.
- Resacralize the secular:
even a dollar bill reveals the imprint of Eternity.
- If God is everywhere, then myths can be generated anywhere,
anytime, by anything. Don't let your Romantic aversion to
science blind you to the Buddha in the computer chip.
- Know your tribe! Myths never arise in a vacuum;
they are the connective tissue of the social body
which enjoys synergistic relations with
dreams (private myths) and rituals (the enactment of myth).
- Expand your horizons! Any mythology worth remembering
will be global in scope. The earth is our home
and humankind is our family.
- Read between the lines! Literalism kills;
Imagination quickens.
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