How Long to Read How Belief Stories Matter

By Marcelline Krafchick

How Long Does it Take to Read How Belief Stories Matter?

It takes the average reader 2 hours and 20 minutes to read How Belief Stories Matter by Marcelline Krafchick

Assuming a reading speed of 250 words per minute. Learn more

Description

Marcelline Krafchicks new book, How Belief-Stories Matter: An Approach to Myth, proves to be a riveting guide to global mythology for a 21st-century audience. This brilliantly executed study offers nothing short of an intellectual revolution proposed by a profound literary and philosophical sensibility. Krafchicks rare cultural gem should be made available to every man, woman, and adolescent rebel in the western (and eastern) world. As the author reminds us, mythmaking (mythopoesis) is universal. The provocative distillation of several decades of charismatic teaching, Krafchicks extraordinary book analyzes a wide range of belief systems that constitute the best that has been thought and known in the world (pace Matthew Arnold). The author begins by reminding her audience that myth might be regarded as religion en-storied through narrative structures, or the story aspect of any belief system, with creeds representing the body of principles that a society honors, enforces, and teaches. With story and doctrine tending to reinforce one another, a third element, ritual, helps to bind them both. Western narratives largely focus on conflict and causality, whereas eastern stories tend to be episodic and do not hinge on plot. Superstition, meanwhile, might be summed up as what the other fellow believes. Like Virginia Woolf, Dr. Krafchick points out that bigotry and homicidal aggression hinge on failures of the human imagination to allow the enemy his/her unique subjectivity.As Wallace Stevens once insisted, death is the mother of beauty; and mortality is the step-father of myths and belief-stories. In order to conjure the pleasant illusion of survival beyond the narrow limitations of embodied subjectivity, we human beings embrace consolatory belief-systems that assure us of eternal life through religious affiliation or military heroism. Upright apes with a big brain need to construct meaningful stories to sort out the perplexities evinced by illness, evil, impotence, troubling dreams and scary nightmaresall elicited by the ubiquitous threat of human, animal, biological, and cosmic assaults. The controlling artistic imagination cultivates a sense of mastery over its hostile environment (as Freud reminds us in his essay on the pleasure principle, with its illuminating discussion of his grandsons fort/da game). With every experience of ecstasy (ek-stasis), human beings need gods to thank. Similarly, random chaos and literal bad luck demand the attribution of suffering to enemies or satanic powers. Hell may be constituted, in Jean-Paul Sartres estimation, by other people, but the notion of endless suffering in retribution for a life ill-lived is certainly predicated on the potential indictment of others. Agnostics, atheists, and religious enthusiasts all tend unconsciously to chant Krafchicks ABC mantra of myth: anything but chaos. As Victor Frankel would argue, human beings invariably define themselves by crafting belief-systems that transcend the isolated self and vindicate ones impassioned life-work in the context of social contribution or future intellectual legacy. Our books, paintings, teachings, and art works are all desperately hurled against the ubiquitous enemy Deathan enemy that can never be defeated. Victories are cultural rather than personal, and a body of myths and religious rituals serves to preserve civilization temporarily in a leaking dinghy offering ephemeral refuge from an endless oceanic expanse of misery and mayhem. Mythand lovegive us the illusion of being able to conquer all.In How Belief-Stories Matter, Krafchick examines a wide range of myths, folklore, and magical thinkingfrom beliefs held sacred by Navajo and Winnebago Native American tribes, through Hindu stories that support an inequitable caste system, Christian and Eleusinian tales of death and resurrection, Chinese Taoist lore, African folktales that support woman-hating, Jewish stories of paternal sacrifice, and Greek accounts of Olympian orgies. The enchantress Circe is vindicated as holier than legend would have us believe, and the political drama of Aeschylus Oresteia aptly illustrates the intersection of myth and politics in ancient Greek culture. Krafchick, refreshingly, does not begin with the Greeks. Instead, she works up to the Greek pantheon in a culminating chapter. The bard Homer, she observes, deftly explores the dramatic power of foreknowledge of death, that excruciating consciousness . . . we all share but cannot afford to dwell on. Death is always waiting at the end, offering human beings but not gods the opportunity for greatness and dignity. How Belief-Stories Matter is a book elegantly executed with dignity, intellectual precision, and stylistic grace. This intriguing and informative text is a pleasure to read and a model of thought-provoking critical prose.

How long is How Belief Stories Matter?

How Belief Stories Matter by Marcelline Krafchick is 137 pages long, and a total of 35,209 words.

This makes it 46% the length of the average book. It also has 43% more words than the average book.

How Long Does it Take to Read How Belief Stories Matter Aloud?

The average oral reading speed is 183 words per minute. This means it takes 3 hours and 12 minutes to read How Belief Stories Matter aloud.

What Reading Level is How Belief Stories Matter?

How Belief Stories Matter is suitable for students ages 10 and up.

Note that there may be other factors that effect this rating besides length that are not factored in on this page. This may include things like complex language or sensitive topics not suitable for students of certain ages.

When deciding what to show young students always use your best judgement and consult a professional.

Where Can I Buy How Belief Stories Matter?

How Belief Stories Matter by Marcelline Krafchick is sold by several retailers and bookshops. However, Read Time works with Amazon to provide an easier way to purchase books.

To buy How Belief Stories Matter by Marcelline Krafchick on Amazon click the button below.

Buy How Belief Stories Matter on Amazon