Tuesday, May 27, 2008

The Birth of Finn

It was asked to analyse the story "The Birth of Finn" through the eyes of Joseph Cambel in hopes to understand the deaper thoughts in a myth more deeply.First if we look at "The Birth of Finn" along side the stages that Joseph proposes they appear to follow quite regularly as he proposed. First he talk of the retreat from the world, this is most noticable in the escape of Finn as a young child to live in the base of a Oak tree. Second of course are the trials, he fight three sons and there even stronger mother (this in another thought may be viewed as the strengh of either women of mothers) where he is able to defend the Kings Dun and win the right to his daughters hand in marriage. This the leads to final trail of taking claim for his deed and claiming the hand that is his, this final trial can be seen as the journey home to the kingdom form which he was born. Finally rather than accept the hand he offers the men imprisoned there lives if the swear to him with the lives, and then leaves to fight greater battles with his sworn soldiers throughout the world.Joseph Cambel also speaks about how each of Us the readers are the heroe in the story, this I find to be quite true. How often would someone put themselves into the place of a worn out and beaten down character. We as a specieces have a drive to be the best out of survival, it serves us well (withstanding some poor desicions that are made recently in time). It is this instinct and drive that pushes us to, create, expand and retell these myths of great heroes over and over for centuries.

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