Table of Contents
Descriptions taken from http://www.sfsu.edu/~avitv/AV.mediacatalog.html
Mythos, Vol. 1: Psyche and
Symbol, The Spirit Land, On Being Human, From Goddesses to God,
The Mystical Life
1:1. Psyche and Symbol (56 minutes)
Introducing the series of lectures in this first video,
Campbell explains the universality of psyche and symbol, how
universal themes emerge from the unconscious in all peoples and
all cultures. These themes are then transformed into myths which
guide individuals through the cycle of life.
1:2. The Spirit Land (55 minutes)
Using Native American stories as a base, Campbell explains
in this second lecture how American Indian myths can make people
aware of the mystery of life, and form the basis for rituals
which prepare them for dealing with the real world. The
difficulties of living in a society without a mythology are also
considered.
1:3. On Being Human (57 minutes)
Characteristics which humans share with the animal world are
studied in this third lecture, as well as the point where animal
behavior ends and human behavior begins. Starting from the cave
paintings at Lascaux, France, the emergence of the myth and the
importance of the goddess in early hunter-gatherer societies is
described.
1:4. From Goddess to God (57 minutes)
...Connections between ancient societies and the origins of the
Western Judeo-Christian tradition, as reflected in the
replacement of earth goddess mythology with war-like male
deities when agriculture and the first great empire - Egypt -
emerge, are the subject of this program.
1:5. The Mystical Life (59 minutes)
...Using texts and artifacts from the ancient Greek mystery
religions centered at Eleusis, Greece, Campbell in this fifth
lecture traces the translation of these traditions into an
" unofficial " Christian mythology.
Mythos, Vol. 2: The Shaping of the Eastern
Tradition
[Each blurb includes the words: "In this
series of five seminars Professor Joseph Campbell explores
mythic images in Hinduism and Buddhism, images central to the
shaping of the eastern tradition."]
[Comments labeled "Back Cover"
are from Amazon]
Back Cover: Joseph Campbell's
exhilarating story-telling and masterful teachings continue in
this second volume on the One Great Story of our human
adventure. The remarkably successful The Power of Myth,
introduced Joseph Campbell and his extraordinary ideas to
millions. Now, journey with this remarkable man as he takes you
through The Shaping of The Eastern Tradition and examines
spirituality through the mythic images of Hinduism and Buddhism.
2.1. The Inward Path (58 minutes)
In this first program Campbell introduces the basic concept of
elementary ideas and the concept of spiritual emancipation,
following it through the Vedic literature and the Upanishads to
the development of the concept of Nirvana and the arrival of the
Buddha.
Back Cover: Campbell introduces us to the core ideas at
the heart of the Eastern traditions and explores what Aldous
Huxley called the Perennial Philosophy and how it is realize in
Hinduism and Buddhism. He traces the development of the idea of
spiritual emancipation from the early Indus Valley civilizations
through the Vedic literature to the Upanishads. Campbell
identifies the point of departure between the Eastern and
Western traditions. Finally, Campbell explains the concept of
Nirvana and sets the stage for the arrival of the Buddha.
2.2. The Enlightened One (57 minutes)
Focusing on stories of the life of the Buddha, Campbell explains
the differences between Theravada ( Hinayana ) and Mahayana
Buddhism in this second tape. Differences between Eastern and
Western religion, and between Buddhism, Taoism and Confucianism
are also considered.
Back Cover: Campbell uses stories of the Buddha's life
and enlightenment to reflect the essence of the Buddhist
religion. He explains the difference between the two principal
types of Buddhism - Theravada (Hinayana) and Mahayana. Campbell
also probes the differences between Eastern and Western religion
by focusing on Buddhism as a religion of "identification
with" the divine rather than on of "relationship
to" it. He also compares Buddhism with Taoism and
Confucianism and explores an ancient collision of East and West.
2.3. Our Eternal Selves (54 minutes)
Campbell explores yoga in this third video, explaining how yoga,
as a form of meditation, b rings the practitioner to ever higher
stages of consciousness and eventually to unity with eternal
undifferentiated consciousness.
Back Cover: Our Eternal Selves introduces us to the
systems of yoga that grew out of the mainstream of India
spiritually. Campbell demonstrates how the Eastern way of
perceiving consciousness is radically different from how it is
perceived in the West. He demonstrates how yoga acts as a
mediation to bring the practitioner to ever-higher stages of
consciousness, to unite one's personal consciousness with the
eternal, undifferentiated consciousness of the divine.
2.4. The Way to Illumination (58 minutes)
The seven chakras (symbolic centers of psychic energy) of
Kundalini Yoga are outlined in this fourth video. The chakras
are then compared to Western psychology and Christian concepts.
Back Cover: Perhaps the most sophisticated form of yoga,
Kundalini Yoga, concentrates on the seven chakras or symbolic
centers of our psychic energy. Campbell explains the full chakra
system of Kundalini Yoga and makes comparison with modern
Western psychology and Christian concepts. Explore how this
system teaches rituals and mediation practices so unit the
spiritual power in the human being with the spiritual force of
the universe.
2.5. The Experience of God (54 minutes)
The focus of this fifth lecture is on the art, philosophy and
mysticism of Buddhism in Tibet. Campbell traces the downward
passage through the chakras (centers of energy in Kundalini
Yoga) - the ritual journey of death described in the Tibetan
Book of the Dead.
Back Cover: Campbell demonstrates how Tibetan Buddhists
turns the ritual experience of death into a spiritual exercise.
Trace with him the stages of the Tibetan Book of the Dead in
which the Llama prepares a dying man and his family for the
final moments of life. This passage, in fact, is a journey
downward through the chakras, the centers of energy of Kundalini
Yoga. Campbell reveals how the Eastern tradition reaches its
most sophisticated expression in the art, philosophy and
mysticism in the Buddhism of Tibet.

Contents
(C) 2006 James Baquet.