Posts Tagged ‘hero’s journey’

Barack Obama and Joseph Campbell’s Hero’s Journey: An Appraisal (Part II)

Monday, November 17th, 2008

Welcome to part II of the Barack Obama and Joseph Campbell’s Hero’s Journey: An Appraisal. This took some time to post - for the reason that I’m moving house these days and I don’t have access to the internet yet. I can’t begin to tell you how grueling it is not to have broadband: it’s like half of my arm is cut off. Ouch! Anyway, without much ado and whining, here’s part II.

 

To recap, last time we talked about section I of Joseph Campbell’s heroic journey, called “Departure” (1). We left our hero right when he was in the “belly of the whale”, but by now he’s out of it and ready to proceed to the next major section of his adventure.

 

II. Initiation

  1. Road of Trials – succession of obstacles
  2. Barack Obama has encountered a number of obstacles or hurdles that he has surpassed in political ascendancy. The first was the candidature for the Illinois State Senate in 1996, when he had to eliminate better titled candidates as Gha-is Askia and his mentor Alice Palmer. He succeeded, albeit using what some critics said as being unfair tactics – he successfully challenged the voting campaign of both candidates who were hence legally suspended from the contest (2).

    The second obstacle was his failed candidacy to US House of Representatives in 2000, when he was defeated by incumbent Bobby Rush by two to one. This was a sore defeat, the only time when he considered giving up politics altogether (3). He didn’t, and Obama learned many useful aspects of campaigning from this attempt.

    In 2004, he successfully run his candidacy for US Senate. Finally, in 2007, he obtained the endorsement of the Democrats for Presidency against the better titled Hillary Clinton.

     

  3. The Meeting with the Goddess –  marriage between the hero and a queenlike or mother-like figure
  4. In 1988, Obama met Michelle Robinson, a fellow Harvard Law graduate,  when he was doing a summer internship at law firm Sidley Austin. He married her in 1992 and has two children with her. Obama is deeply admirative of his wife, whom he called “his rock”. He speaks of her, “There’s something about her that projects such honesty and strength. It’s what makes her such an unbelievable professional, and partner, and mother, and wife” (4).

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Barack Obama and Joseph Campbell’s Hero’s Journey: An Appraisal (I)

Tuesday, November 11th, 2008

Even as I was deeply immersed into research of the Hermetic tradition and the god Thoth, I could not avoid being drawn into the current events of Barack Obama’s US election. I have always thought that the esotericists (particularly those of Hermetic extract) have been men and women of the world, engaged in the transformation of the world into a better place. Perhaps it is down this line that I want to live as well, so please understand if I may from time to time jump thousands of years from Thoth to Barack Obama and back again. This exercise is, of course, carried out in the spirit of esotericism: looking at the underlying trends behind the surface.

It has hence occurred to me that Obama’s image and story can be compared to Joseph Campbell’s myth of the Hero, which Campbell called the “monomyth” (1). Whether consciously or unconsciously, people – and sometimes Obama himself – tend to project this image upon him. As early as 2006, he was called star and legend (2), and recently I have even read an online blog where the writer called him ‘savior’! (3) Mind you, I’m not laying a claim of profound originality on this –  I discovered then that George Lucas has already made note of Obama following the Hero’s Journey (4) and there are two bloggers that talked about it, albeit sketchily (5, 6). However, I would like to look at this more in detail than the others I have read.

Let’s start with the beginning. For those that don’t know, Joseph Campbell (1904-1987) was one of the foremost mythologists of his age (7). He is primarily remembered for his groundbreaking book, The Hero with a Thousand Faces. It is in this one that he articulated the myth of the hero’s journey, which directly influenced George Lucas’ Star Wars, Disney’s The Lion King, and countless movies and books ever since (8). The book ‘deconstructs’ the journey of the hero in a number of steps. It is my intention here to compare these steps with the story of Obama’s rise to power and Presidency.

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