Bella Caracappa: A form of self-annihilation
In Campell’s book, Hero of a Thousand Faces, he says that there is “Emphasis to the lesson that the passage of the threshold is a form of self-annihilation.” (Campbell 91). I find this fact interesting because he says self-annihilation instead of a less severe wording such as self-reconstruction or change. Using the word annihilation connects to the idea of the death of the body, mostly used during times of war. Which is ironic in the fact that this is a phase during the beginning stages of the hero's journey, and not the end.
I believe that annihilation refers to the death of the soul, not the body. In this phase, the soul is reconstructed as the hero's values and world begin to change. Using the form of self-annihilations adds more meaning to the change present in this stage of the hero’s journey, as it constitutes the fact that although the body may not change with the surroundings the soul definitely will.
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