Joseph Campbell: Myth & Storytelling as a Gateway to Psyche and Soul
August 21 – November 13, 2025
Lifelong Learner Membership Rate: $876 | Offered Live via Zoom
Program Description
Joseph Campbell Certificate 2025
A PGI graduate certificate program in partnership with the Joseph Campbell Foundation
Pacifica Graduate Institute, in partnership with the Joseph Campbell Foundation, is proud to introduce an enriching Graduate Certificate Program dedicated to the study of Joseph Campbell’s work and its mythic relationship to storytelling. This unique program offers a deep dive into key ideas from Campbell’s expansive body of work, providing students with a nuanced understanding of his influential ideas and concepts, and then applying these ideas to the discipline of storytelling. Each week, a Campbell practitioner will guide participants through Campbell’s work, unpacking core ideas for understanding their mythic relationship to the understanding of storytelling.
What you will receive:
- 12 Live Interactive Discussion Groups (via Zoom) with Q&A (listed in Pacific time)
- 12 Pre-Recorded Learning Sessions with Campbell practitioners
- A Learning Resource Guide with Recommended Readings and Resources
- A Private, online Discussion Forum
- An Advanced Certificate in Joseph Campbell: Myth & Storytelling as a gateway to psyche and soul from Pacifica Graduate Institute
Individual Session Descriptions
Module 1 – Call To Adventure Separation Phase of the Adventure
Week 1 – August 21: The Power of Myth: The life, work, and influence of Joseph Campbell
Live Zoom Session: August 21, 2025 – 12:00 Noon – 1:30 PM Pacific Time
Instructors: John Bucher, Joanna Gardner, Brad Olson, Stephanie Zajchowski
Description: The mythic life and work of Joseph Campbell has continued to draw interest and find audiences around the world since his death in 1987. In this opening session, leaders from the Joseph Campbell Foundation will present and unpack Campbell’s life, the scope of his work, and the impact that it has had in the world.
Week 2 – August 28: Campbell, modernism, and psychology
Live Zoom Session: August 28, 2025 – 12:00 Noon – 1:30 PM Pacific Time
Instructor: Brad Olson
Description: To properly appreciate and understand Campbell and his work, one must understand modernism. In this course we will explore the influence of modernism on Campbell as well as its influence on psychology, particularly psychoanalysis, itself a production of modernism.
Week 3 – September 11: Campbell, characters, and archetypes
Live Zoom Session: September 11, 2025 – 12:00 Noon – 1:30 PM Pacific Time
Instructor: Scott Neumeister
Description: In this class, we will explore how Campbell viewed characters in mythic stories as expressions of what psychologist Carl Jung described as archetypes. These recurring patterns or motifs occur in both the characters themselves and the situations they experience. We will cover several of Campbell’s most frequently discussed archetypes, including the hero, the mentor, the threshold guardian, and the trickster.
Week 4 – September 18: Campbell and creativity
Live Zoom Session: September 18, 2025 – 12:00 Noon – 1:30 PM Pacific Time
Instructor: Joanna Gardner
Description: Joseph Campbell’s book The Hero With a Thousand Faces (1949) won the Contribution to Creative Literature award from the National Institute of Arts and Letters, and the book continues to inspire artists, writers, and creative people from every field. Campbell himself said that he wrote for students and artists, and his own work clearly constitutes an important creative contribution in itself. In this session, you’ll learn about Campbell’s creativity, his creative process, and how his work and his way of working can breathe new life into yours.
Module 2 – Mythic Storytelling Initiation Phase of the Adventure
Week 5 – September 25: Campbell and Arthurian Romances
Live Zoom Session: September 25, 2025 – 12:00 Noon – 1:30 PM Pacific Time
Instructor: Stephanie Zajchowski
Description: Arthurian Romances and stories of the Holy Grail connect with myths from all over the world. In this session, we will trace these connections, paying careful attention to each myth’s particularities while applying Campbell’s comparative lens to explore key themes and patterns. You will gain a greater understanding of the narratives behind the Grail legend and its enduring resonance.
Week 6 – October 2: Campbell and fairy tales
Live Zoom Session: October 2, 2025 – 12:00 Noon – 1:30 PM Pacific Time
Instructor: Joanna Gardner
Description: “The folk tale is the primer of the picture-language of the soul,” Joseph Campbell writes in his 1944 introduction to Pantheon’s edition of Grimm’s Fairy Tales. Using that essay as a starting point, this session situates Campbell’s ideas in the contemporary study of wonder tales, surveying approaches including depth psychology, decoloniality, feminism, and the new materialism. You’ll learn how to apply these theories as well as Campbell’s four functions of myth to the interpretation of fairy tales, concluding with an analysis of the film Pan’s Labyrinth.
Week 7 – October 9: Campbell and the Alchemy of His Ideas
Live Zoom Session: October 9, 2025 – 12:00 Noon – 1:30 PM Pacific Time
Instructors: Scott Neumeister, Joanna Gardner, Brad Olson, Stephanie Zajchowski
Description: At this midpoint in our journey, we will consider the variety of ideas that we have discovered from Joseph Campbell thus far and begin to process what they might mean with consideration to each other. In this session, we will consider whether there are unified thematic theories developing in Campbell’s work that can now be identified.
Week 8 – October 16: Campbell and the tales of Homer
Live Zoom Session: October 16, 2025 – 12:00 Noon – 1:30 PM Pacific Time
Instructor: Scott Neumeister
Description: What did Campell’s work reveal about the two greatest epics of the Ancient Greeks, The Iliad and The Odyssey? This week’s class will investigate the two mega-themes of these works—warfare and the return home—as well as Campbell’s insights on how this tale of a Bronze Age war still resonates today.
Module 3 – Mythic Journeys Return Phase of the Adventure
Week 9 – October 23: The hero’s journey, The heroine’s journey, & The collective journey
Live Zoom Session: October 23, 2025 – 12:00 Noon – 1:30 PM Pacific Time
Instructor: John Bucher
Description: Joseph Campbell’s articulation of the Hero’s Journey has had an impact on the world since it was first published in his book, The Hero with a Thousand Faces in 1949. Since that time, alternatives on and amplifications of the journey have found their own resonance. In this session, we will explore Campbell’s Hero’s Journey along with The Heroine’s Journey and a recent model called The Collective Journey.
Week 10 – October 30: Campbell in the age of metamodernism
Live Zoom Session: October 30, 2025 – 12:00 Noon – 1:30 PM Pacific Time
Instructor: Brad Olson
Description: Metamodernism is the most recent evolution of Critical Theory and a potentially unifying response to the individualism of Modernism and the fragmentation of Postmodernism. Its attention to identifying novel ways of addressing and recreating the process of personal development, the way in which societies are governed, the need for continued adaptation to an increasingly complex world, and reimagining the human relationship to nature itself, make it an ideal perspective from which to read Joseph Campbell. In some sense, Campbell was made for metamodernism.
Week 11 – November 6: Campbell and personal myth
Live Zoom Session: November 6, 2025 – 12:00 Noon – 1:30 PM Pacific Time
Instructor: Stephanie Zajchowski
Description: Myths help us see our personal lives within the archetypal patterning of the human experience. Campbell considered such self-revelation the ultimate call to adventure; to bring our unique gifts to the world is the realization of our personal myth. In this session, you will learn about Campbell’s understanding of personal myth, focusing on his fourth function of myth, the psychological function. Applying this approach, you will learn how to interpret your life mythically, developing your own personal mythology as a way to find deeper meaning in your lived experience.
Week 12 – November 13: Reading Campbell in the 21st century
Live Zoom Session: November 13, 2025 – 12:00 Noon – 1:30 PM Pacific Time
Instructors: John Bucher, Joanna Gardner, Brad Olson, Stephanie Zajchowski
Description: In this final session, Campbell’s work will be tied together and viewed through the lens of the culture we now live in. While many of Campbell’s ideas continue to be meaningful in the world today, other ideas invite discussion and even critique. Leaders from the Joseph Campbell Foundation will guide students through the nuanced journey of reading Campbell in the 21st century.
Learning Objectives:
By the End of This Course You Will Be Able To:
Week 1:
- Evaluate Campbell’s theoretical approaches to myth, including the hermeneutics of depth psychology.
- Evaluate Campbell’s approach to multicultural, ethnic, gender, and racial diversity.
- Develop a critical understanding of the trajectory and influence of Campbell’s life and work.
Week 2:
- Discuss Campbell’s approach to myth through the lens of modernism.
- Discuss the influence of psychology on Cambell’s work on mythology.
Week 3:
- Describe how Campbell used Jung’s concept of archetypes as a fundamental method of describing myths.
- Analyze at a basic level both literary/filmic and personal stories to determine some archetypes that appear in them.
Week 4:
- Develop an understanding of Joseph Campbell’s personal creativity.
- Evaluate Campbell’s efforts to inspire creativity in others.
Week 5:
- Develop a critical understanding of Arthurian and Grail myths from the Middle Ages to Postmodernism.
- Recognize key themes, mythic motifs, and archetypal patterns.
Week 6:
- Develop an understanding of Joseph Campbell’s views about fairy tales in conversation with contemporary fairy tale studies (also called wonder tale studies).
- Apply Campbell’s four functions of myth to the analysis of fairy tale images.
Week 7:
- Recognize the thematic conjunctions between topics covered in the first half of the course.
- Apply critical thinking towards forming a unified theory around Campbell’s work.
Week 8:
- Compare Campbell’s views on the overarching themes of The Iliad and The Odyssey.
- Identify at a basic level how both literary/filmic and personal imbalance in pairs of opposites operates just as in Homer’s works.
Week 9:
- Evaluate Campbell’s theoretical approach to myth with intentional emphasis on the Hero’s Journey model.
- Develop a critical understanding of significant models that followed Campbell’s and understand how these models amplified and expanded Campbell’s model.
Week 10:
- Reimagine Campbell’s work and thought in the context of its relevance to contemporary life using critical theory, particularly metamodernism, as a method to amplify and expand Campbell’s work and reconnect to the enduringly salient features of his work.
Week 11:
- Evaluate Campbell’s theory of the four functions of myth with emphasis on the pedagogical and psychological aspects of myth.
- Utilize Campbell’s approach as a basis for interpreting the mythic significance of current experience and constructing a personal mythology.
Week 12:
- Evaluate Joseph Campbell’s work through a multidisciplinary approach based on the concepts presented throughout the course.
- Develop an understanding of possibilities around the present and future of Campbellian studies.
Career Competencies:
- Story Development and Narrative Design
Develop compelling stories and scripts grounded in universal mythic structures, useful for careers in writing, screenwriting, game design, and content creation.
- Critical Thinking and Cultural Literacy
Analyze and synthesize complex ideas across disciplines, enhancing skills for academia, education, journalism, and cultural consultancy.
- Creative Problem-Solving
Use mythic frameworks as tools for innovation and transformation, applicable in coaching, leadership development, therapeutic practices, and organizational storytelling.
- Communication and Interpretation
Communicate complex theoretical ideas clearly through oral and written formats, with practical applications in teaching, public speaking, and media production.
- Psychological Insight and Empathy
Apply mythic and archetypal insights to deepen emotional intelligence, beneficial in counseling, social work, leadership, and other human-centered professions.
SCHEDULE FOR LIVE ONLINE LEARNING SESSIONS
Week 1- August 21, 2025, 12-1:30pm PT John Bucher, Joanna Gardner, Brad Olson, Stephanie Zajchowski
Week2- August 28, 2025, 12-1:30pm PT Brad Olson
Week 3 – September 11, 2025, 12-1:30pm PT Scott Neumeister
Week 4- September 18, 2025, 12-1:30pm PT Joanna Gardner
Week 5- September 25,2025 12-1:30pm PT Stephanie Zajchowski
Week 6- October 2, 2025, 12-1:30pm PT Joanna Gardner
Week 7- October 9, 2025,12-1:30pm PT Scott Neumeister, Joanna Gardner, Brad Olson, Stephanie Zajchowski
Week 8- October 16, 2025, 12-1:30pm PT Scott Neumeister
Week 9- October 23, 2025, 12-1:30pm PT John Bucher
Week 10-October 30, 2025, 12-1:30pm PT Brad Olson
Week 11- November 6,2025, 12-1:30pm PT Stephanie Zajchowski
Week 12- November 13, 2025, 12-1:30pm PT John Bucher, Joanna Gardner, Brad Olson, Stephanie Zajchowski
Required & Recommended Readings:
Week 1 Required Reading:
- Campbell, J. (2008). “Chapter 1: Departure.” The Hero With a Thousand Faces. New World Library. pp. 41-80
Week 1 Recommended Reading:
- Larsen, S, & Larsen, R. (1991). Joseph Campbell: A Fire in the Mind. Inner Traditions.
Week 2 Required Reading:
- Felser, J. M. (1996). Was Joseph Campbell a postmodernist? Journal of the American Academy of Religion, 64(2), 395–417.
Week 2 Recommended Reading:
- Gay, P. (2010). Modernism: The Lure of Heresy. W. Norton & Company.
- Armstrong, T. (2005). Modernism: A Cultural History. Polity Press.
Week 3 Required Reading/Viewing:
- Jung, C.G. (1960). “Instinct and the Unconscious.” In C.G. Jung, Structure & Dynamics of the Psyche. (R.F.C. Hull, Trans.). Collected Works. Vol. 8. Bollingen XX. Princeton University Press. pp. 174-185.
https://jungiancenter.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/09/vol-8-the-structure-and-dynamics-of-the-psyche.pdf - Joseph Campbell and the Power of Myth | Ep. 1: “The Hero’s Adventure”
- https://billmoyers.com/content/ep-1-joseph-campbell-and-the-power-of-myth-the-hero%e2%80%99s-adventure-audio/
- Carolyn Myss- An Introduction to the Power of Archetypes
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9VZYrlVHLL0
Week 4 Required Reading:
- Campbell, J. (1991). “Chapter 1: Experience and Authority.” The Masks of God: Creative Mythology. New World Library. pp 3-41.
- Gardner, J. (2024). “To Radiate and Create.” The Practice of Enchantment. Joseph Campbell Foundation. 97-102
Week 5 Required Reading:
- Campbell, J. (2015). “Chapter 7: The Waste Land.” Romance of the Grail: The Magic and Mystery of Arthurian Myth. New World Library. pp. 149-169.
Week 6 Required Reading:
- Campbell, J. (2018) “Chapter 1: The Fairy Tale.” The Flight of the Wild Gander. New World Library. pp. 1-25.
- Gardner, J. (2024). “Entering the Mythscape of Pan’s Labyrinth.” The Practice of Enchantment. Joseph Campbell Foundation. 79-84
Week 7 Required Reading:
- Campbell, J. (2024). “Chapter 5: The Inward Turn.” Myth and Meaning: Conversations on Mythology and Life. New World Library. pp. 139-178
Week 8 Required Reading:
- Campbell, J. (2013). “Chapter 6: Iliad and Odyssey: Return of the Goddess.” Goddesses: Mysteries of the Feminine Divine, pp. 143-180.
- The Homeric Legends – Joseph Campbell Foundation
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL1MmsHS76HcZ5y9wiwt3GHh7m2GZO1V0d
Week 9 Required Reading:
- Campbell, J. (2008). “Prologue: The Monomyth.” The Hero With a Thousand Faces. New World Library. pp. 1-40
Week 9 Recommended Reading:
- Murdock, M. (2020). The Heroine’s Journey. Shambala.
Week 10 Required Reading:
- Campbell, J. (2017). “Chapter 7, Chapter 8.” The Ecstasy of Being: Mythology and Dance. New World Library. pp. 109-120.
- Olson, B. (2024). The Mythopoetic Impulse. Joseph Campbell Foundation. pp. 136-139, 155-158.
Week 10 Recommended Reading:
- Storm, J.A.J. (2021). Metamodernism: The Future of Theory. U of Chicago Press.
- Gibbons, A, Van den Akker, R, & Vermeulen, T. (Eds). (2017). Metamodernism: Historicity, Affect, and Depth After Postmodernism. Rowman & Littlefield International.
Week 11 Required Reading:
- Campbell, J. (2004). “Chapter V: Personal Myth.” Pathways to Bliss. New World Library. pp 85-108.
Week 12 Required Reading:
- Campbell, J. (1986). “Chapter 1: Cosmology and the Mythic Imagination.” Inner Reaches of Outer Space, pp.1-26
Program Details
Event Dates:
August 21 – November 13, 2025, 12:00 – 1:30pm PT
Joseph Campbell Graduate Certificate with Dr. John Bucher, Dr. Joanna Gardner, Dr. Stephanie Zajchowski, Dr. Scott Neumeister, Dr. Bradley Olson
Access to D2L and course materials will be provided by August 14, 2025
International participation is encouraged and welcome
Registration Fees
$1095. – General Rate
$930.75 – Pacifica Alumni, & Senior Rate
$ 876. – Lifelong Learner Membership Rate
$657. – PGI Extension Student Rate
You have the option of putting down a 50% deposit when registering for the program and paying the remaining balance in installments of your choice until September 21, 2025. You can select this on the registration form.
Limited scholarship and reduced tuition opportunities are available for this program. You can fill out a scholarship application form here. The deadline for scholarship applications is August 7, 2025.
All of the live Zoom sessions will be recorded and made available to everyone registered for the program. If you watch the recordings and keep up with the online discussion forum you will qualify for the certificate of completion.
Membership Pricing
As a Member of our Pacifica Degree Student Membership program, you can receive 40% off of the General Rate for this program! To register and receive your special member-only, code please click here.
(Please note that the Pacifica Degree Student Membership program is only for current students at Pacifica Graduate Institute enrolled in a full-time degree program).
As a Member of Our Lifelong Learner Membership program, you can receive 20% off of the General Rate for this program! To register and receive your special member-only code, please click here.
Student Members and Lifelong Learner Members can input their member-only code in the DISCOUNT CODE box on the registration form to receive their membership pricing.
About the Teachers
John Bucher, Ph.D. is a mythologist, storyteller, and writer based out of Hollywood, California. He serves as Creative Director for the Joseph Campbell Foundation and is also an author, podcaster, and speaker. He has worked with government and cultural leaders around the world as well as culturally significant companies including HBO, DC Comics, The History Channel, A24 Films, Atlas Obscura, The John Maxwell Leadership Foundation. He has served as a producer, consultant, and writer for numerous film, television, and Virtual Reality projects. He is the author of six books including the best-selling Storytelling for Virtual Reality, named by BookAuthority as one of the best storytelling books of all time. Disruptor named him one of the top 25 influencers in Virtual Reality. He holds a PhD in Mythology and Depth Psychology and has spoken on 6 continents about using the power of story and myth to reframe how individuals, organizations, cultures, and nations believe and behave.
Joanna Gardner, PhD, is a writer, mythologist, and magical realist whose research focuses on myth, creativity, wonder tales, and goddesses. Joanna serves as adjunct professor in Pacifica Graduate Institute’s Mythological Studies program, and as director of marketing and communications for the Joseph Campbell Foundation, where she also contributes to the popular MythBlast essay series. She is the lead author of Goddesses: A Skeleton Key Study Guide and a co-founder of the Fates and Graces, hosting webinars and workshops for mythic readers and writers. You can find Joanna’s blog and additional publications on her website, joannagardner.com.
Stephanie Zajchowski, Ph.D., is a mythologist and writer focusing on the intersection of myth, religion, and women’s studies. She serves as the Director of Operations for the Joseph Campbell Foundation, writes for its popular MythBlast essay series, and teaches in the foundation’s online courses. Stephanie is also a co-founder of The Fates and Graces, which hosts webinars and workshops for mythic readers and writers. She is a contributing author of Goddesses: A Skeleton Key Study Guide, and she holds a Ph.D. in Mythology with a focus in Depth Psychology along with a certification in Spiritual Direction. Ever in search of the deeper narratives that shape the human experience, she shares her work at stephaniezajchowski.com.
Scott Neumeister, PhD, is a literary scholar, author, TEDx speaker, and mythic pathfinder from Tampa, Florida, where he earned his PhD in English from the University of South Florida in 2018. His specialization in multiethnic American literature and mythology comes after careers as an information technology systems engineer and a teacher of English and mythology at the middle school and college levels. Scott coauthored Let Love Lead: On a Course to Freedom with Gary L. Lemons and Susie Hoeller, and he has served as a facilitator for the Joseph Campbell Foundation’s Myth and Meaning book club at Literati.
Bradley Olson, PhD, is an author, speaker, and a psychotherapist. He serves as the Publications Director for the Joseph Campbell Foundation, as well as the Editor of the MythBlast Series and the host of JCF’s flagship podcast, Pathways With Joseph Campbell. Dr. Olson holds a PhD in Mythological Studies from Pacifica Graduate Institute. Dr. OIson is also a depth psychologist in private practice in Flagstaff, Arizona, where he has lived since 1995. Dr. Olson has graduate degrees in psychology from the University of Oklahoma. Dr. Olson offers mythic life coaching at What’s Mything in Your Life (bradleyolsonphd.com).
General Information
Location
Hosted Online
Cancellations
Cancellations 14 days or more prior to the program start date receive a 100% refund of program registrations. After 14 days, up to 7 days prior to the program start date, a 50% refund is available. For cancellations made less than 7 days of program start date, no refund is available.
For additional information, including travel, cancellation policy, and disability services please visit our general information section.
Registration Details
August 21 – November 13, 2025
- Number of Classes: 12 Classes
- Class Length: 1 ½ hours
- Class Time: 12pm – 1:30pm PT. All Sessions are Pacific Time
- CECs: 0