The Mythic World of the Navajo:The Vision of Black Elk

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  • Опубліковано 20 сер 2024
  • Joseph Campbell shares Oglala Lakota medicine man Black Elk's mythic vision of the interconnected world.
    www.jcf.org

КОМЕНТАРІ • 20

  • @skittles2055
    @skittles2055 6 місяців тому +3

    “One must realize that the symbolism of one’s own myth, is simply a local inflection of the universal forms.” (Closing line)

  • @Gekokujo76
    @Gekokujo76 5 років тому +6

    I thought Campbell was misnaming Black Elk as a Navajo. I have read "Black Elk Speaks" and it is a great book that will open your eyes to many truths. Im not just speaking of the spiritual and metaphysical, but also the true ways of the Native American people.

  • @rogerionagaoka2345
    @rogerionagaoka2345 5 років тому +6

    "The Center of the World IS everywhere"

  • @dh.maitrijit4462
    @dh.maitrijit4462 5 років тому +1

    Thank you so much ... 🌻🌻🌻

  • @rgcwow
    @rgcwow 3 роки тому +7

    Disjointed, hacked up, out of context bits and pieces of Campbell"s message?
    The world needs, for example, the full Moyer / Campbell interviews uncut, But this foumdation is instead hacking Campbell's core messages up into tiny little disjointed hacked up bits and pieces. They are doing that as teasers to commercially monetize Campbel's work.
    The very nature of Campell's works must remain freely available, intact, in context, and sui- generis on a "giving foot forward" monetization model, which primarily is not the JC Foundation monetization model.
    Does this greedy foundation have copyrights on these works?
    Why can't anyone post these works up on IE. You Tube etc. free uncut unedited? For instance the full uncut Campbel / Moyers series.
    Why is Moyer not acting to counter this outrage?
    How to obtain these works intact & unedited now like when Campbell was alive without profiteering? That would be Campbell's will.
    The Campbell Foundation, in the guise of proliferating Campbell's body of work, is instead fragmenting it for commercial monetary motives.
    So aggravating!
    Seriously any effort to keep Campbell's work free, and free of being hacked up, and free of being exploited by the world system, then count us in.
    Metaphorically speaking: God was out for a stroll one day with the devil following along & imitating God. God was carrying something "he" had picked up along the way. The devil runs up and asks. "whatcha got there God?" God replies, "I got the truth." The devil then says," give it to me & I will organize it for you!".
    JC Foundation you need to stop "money changing on the temple steps".
    hdyy

    • @maskcollector6949
      @maskcollector6949 3 роки тому +2

      It's simply put, too powerful a message to be made public. Even though I am for free information: his teachings are too eye opening for most to hear, still. Source: I've independently come up with basically all of the same information and was like "woah this guy did this years ago". I only found him recently, but yeah, it's just too much too soon. The information will get out there when it's time, pandora's box already been opened. I suggest Pirating the videos and uploading them as a torrent.

    • @StephenGutknecht
      @StephenGutknecht 3 роки тому

      @@maskcollector6949 I agree. People can not digest this all at once unless compelled to. In Power of Myth, Campbell says that very thing... that if a student isn't interested in Myth they can just pass the learning by.
      However, Campbell isn't the only Mythology titian of NYC. Howard Bloom is active on UA-cam this very week and is well versed and published on Mythology issues. And Well, Edward Bernays is the closed manipulative teacher to Madison Avenue students that Campbell confronts. And another NYC tower comes to mind, Neil Postman...
      Often times I view that Edward Bernays (student) is educating people in manipulative ways, and Campbell is trying to open source Mythology - specifically to women at Lawrence. Campbell is kind of a Banksy vs. Edward Bernays ;)

    • @mrmotl1
      @mrmotl1 2 роки тому

      I had wondered this myself, I like to consume these in their full context otherwise things get lost along the way. That's what you get everybody's got to sell their ads/a$$ these days everybody's doing it for the wrong purpose and missing the point, cuz their eyes on the prize and not the adventure along the way.

  • @RudysRhythmandRevue
    @RudysRhythmandRevue Рік тому

    Deep within the center of your heart, there is a lotus, within the center of that lotus there is a diamond. This diamond is the source of all of creation, within all of creation, there is only one lotus.
    The center of the world is where you stand, deep within your heart.

  • @nikaragwa5054
    @nikaragwa5054 4 роки тому +1

    Where I can find the full show?? Please help

    • @detrockcity3
      @detrockcity3 4 роки тому +2

      You can pay them because there's never enough money in the world, and they will use it to...continue charging a lot for whatever they can.

    • @Bea-wb9uk
      @Bea-wb9uk Рік тому

      Go find Bill Moyer's interviews with Campbell. They are very comprehensive interviews/ lectures.

  • @Bea-wb9uk
    @Bea-wb9uk Рік тому

    Black Elk was a Sioux. Not a Navajo. The title is incorrect. They just edited badly at the beginning because they didn't listen to what they posted very long.

    • @teejay8212
      @teejay8212 8 місяців тому

      we were all apart of a larger tribe separated by clans...."Navajo" the words came later, all the tribes of the USA are mentioned in our creation myth story as well as the southern natives. the Navajo consists of a large portion of those clan tribes. the Ute Apache and most others are linguistically bound and share an origin with the navajo as well as alot of southwest tribes. I can actually understand some Athabaskan words

    • @Bea-wb9uk
      @Bea-wb9uk 8 місяців тому

      Black Elk was a Lakota Sioux. To identify his history of the Ghost shirt commonly associated with the Ghost shirt movement which led to his vision. Black Elk himself identified himself as a Lakota. It's not an issue to define him as what he called himself. Defining processes for this person include his own self identification. Read the book "Black Elk speaks" It is full of his own words identifying his own tribe and it's history. I don't know why the younger generations have a problem with defining things. But it seems they resist it even when the man called himself a Lakota Sioux. It's not logical. Call Black Elk what he called himself. A Lakota Sioux, a ghost dancer, a fighter in the Custard war with the rest of his tribe.

    • @teejay8212
      @teejay8212 8 місяців тому

      yes I know...but my great great grandfather was a chief under sitting bull and was full blooded Navajo. the sioux as far as i remember consists of 7 different tribes called the 7 bands of the Lakota. the sioux are just 1 of 7 tribes or clans. the navajo originally started w 4 but grew to over to over 100 back in the day.... @@Bea-wb9uk​

    • @Bea-wb9uk
      @Bea-wb9uk 8 місяців тому

      @@teejay8212 en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sioux

    • @teejay8212
      @teejay8212 8 місяців тому

      lol I know he wasn't a Navajo, I'm Navajo.