I will paste my Professor’s requirements for the paper along with my classmate’

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I will paste my Professor’s requirements for the paper along with my classmate’s discussion that is to be replied to.
Before this discussion review/view “Heroic Archetypes,” “Assorted Heroes,” “The Hero’s Journey-Joseph Campbell,” “Inside Joseph Campbell-Ep 3… and “Heroes and Villains” from Myth and Monsters
“Scholarly/Secondary Sources-Before this discussion, prepare by reading “Gods and Heroes” from the book Classic Mythology: A Very Short Introduction by Helen Morales and “The Hero and the God” from the book The Hero With A Thousand Faces by Joseph Campbell
1. Attendance
Discussions are a critical learning experience. Participation in all discussions is required.
2. Participation
Reply to participate.
Student must post a minimum of three (3) times in each graded discussion: First post to initial prompt(s) and two posts to peers and/or instructor’s post
3. Critical Thinking
Student must respond with the same academic rigor as first post (see example on syllabus)
All three posts must use, quote, and *cite the required and professor provided scholarly readings.
All 3 posts should be a minimum of 150 words, excluding quoted material and citations.
*Citing the reading means using proper MLA in-text citations and a proper Works Cited for each post. Review proper MLA here
Grading: This activity will be graded using the Discussion Grading Rubric. Don’t forget to review the discussion rubric as a reference when you are writing your posts. If you have any questions, please contact me.
Marlee McCave
Jul 18, 2022 at 9:22 PM
The Hero
The hero’s journey is explained by Joseph Campbell in “The Hero’s Journey”. He explains the journey in 12 stages: Status Quo, Call to Adventure, Assistance, Departure, Trials, Approach, Crisis, Treasure, Results, Return, New Life, and Resolution. In short, the hero goes on an adventure, comes head-to-head with a catastrophe, meets a mentor/guide who helps him through, they win said catastrophe and return home triumphant. This journey explanation is said to fit into any hero story and explain the framework of the plot. These 12 stages can be used to explain the Hero’s journey in every story no matter what background or culture the story is from, they all go on basically the same journey with the same plan in mind and same ending. The Hero always comes out victorious. “Whether the hero be ridiculous, sublime, Greek or barbarian, gentile or Jew, his journey varies little in essential plan.” (Campbell 30)
This myth can relate to our everyday reality because it shows us that we can overcome no matter what life throws at us. We meet people every day that help mold us into who we are and teach us lessons that we can learn from. Then, what we learn from overcoming those battles/challenges, we can help others and become a hero in their eyes and our own.
I believe that humanity can take quite a lot away from this concept of heroes. We can begin to understand our own battles, our own struggles and realize that we can overcome them become our own hero as well as a hero to others. We don’t understand our own strengths, opportunities, and limits. We all are on our own journey of life; we all have obstacles to overcome. “What makes someone mythic is not whether or not he lived, or lived well, but whether or not he was larger than life.” (Morales 55)

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