“EXTENDED HIS EARLIER PERSPECTIVE ON MYTH”
CAMPBELL, Joseph. The Masks of God. New York: Viking Press, 1959, 1962, 1964, (1968). Four volumes. Octavo, original cloth, original dust jackets.
First edition of all four volumes of Campbell's seminal work of comparative mythology, in original dust jackets.
Campbell's "fully mature and characteristic original work began in 1949, when he published The Hero with a Thousand Faces. In this influential and extraordinarily popular work, Campbell traced the theme of the hero's journey (which he called the 'monomyth') through the world's mythologies… Campbell's next major work was The Masks of God, a study of world mythology in four volumes: Primitive Mythology (1959), Oriental Mythology (1961), Occidental Mythology (1964), and Creative Mythology (1968). Here he extended his earlier perspective on myth while vastly increasing the range of his references and dividing his material along broad regional and historical lines. In the final two volumes, Campbell wrestled with the relatively intolerant monotheistic religions of the West and with the modern rationalism that would dismiss all mythology as false. Increasingly, Campbell developed the theme that dominated his later work: mythology could redeem modern men and women by giving them authentic experience, but only if myths were read spiritually. Western religions, including Judaism, Christianity, and Islam, insisted on the literal truth of their myths and so lost their power" (ANB). Each volume with black-and-white in-text illustrations, reference notes and an index.
A lovely set in about-fine condition.