Shipwrecks, citizen science and archaeomythology

Dr. María Suárez Toro

Scholar Salon #56 is a special presentation by María Suárez Toro  to discuss her underwater archaeology program in Costa Rica and to celebrate the birth of a new collaborative project. She has invited two partners to discuss this exciting interdisciplinary effort to combine principles of archaeomythology with the investigation of shipwrecks–and identity– in Costa Rica and in South Africa. To our knowledge, this is the first time that these concepts of archaeomythology have been applied to a myth-making program of citizen science like Maria’s underwater archaeology work with young adults. 

Dr. María Suárez Toro

María Suárez Toro (Puerto Rican and Costa Rican), “feminist, teacher, activist, writer, fisherwoman and scuba diver,”  is the co-founder of Ambassadors of the Sea in Costa Rica’s Caribbean. As research coordinator of its community underwater archaeology program, she works with young people searching for identity in a project stewarded by citizen scientists, through their exploration of  sunken slave ships. The project researchers are Afro and native youth, the direct inheritors of the legacies of untold stories of their coastal communities. Maria has created a literary and mythic ancestral Yoruba character,  Tona Ina, “sea light” in Yoruba. Tona Ina is the storyteller who recovers the cultural stories and the mythologies found in the wrecks being researched.

Joan Marler Portrait
Dr. Joan Marler

Joan Marler is the executive director of the Institute of Archaeomythology who earned her doctorate in Philosophy and Religion and Women’s Spirituality at the California Institute of Integral Studies in San Francisco. She is the editor of The Civilization of the Goddess by Marija Gimbutas and the Journal of Archaeomythology, among other publications, and has authored numerous articles on archaeomythological themes. Her collaboration with María Suárez Toro applies the interdisciplinary nature of archaeomythology to include the multi-generational underwater excavations of possible slave ships discovered off the coast of Costa Rica, linking scientific studies of ongoing archaeological discoveries with the deep memories of afro-descendent communities residing along the coast.

Aaniyah Martin

Aaniyah Martin is a South African graduate student in the caring of the hydrocommons and marine environment in post apartheid South Africa, addressing the injustices of apartheid legacy and co-creating care for the hydrocommons.It is  now 30 years after democracy in South Africa, yet the history and legacy of apartheid continues and  has an effect on Black and Indigenous People of Colour (BIPOC) by excluding them from the ocean  and other spaces. Her ancestors were brought to the Cape as slaves from Indonesia in the late 1600s. Her walking and  swimming takes place along the False Bay coastline of Cape Town, which is the city where she was born. The False Bay coastline is “laden with stories, both shared and erased,” and Aaniyah’s research focuses on re-telling and re-mapping stories that have been forgotten.” Her study is also being informed by a recent visit to Costa Rica’s Southern Caribbean where she met María Suárez Toro and Tona Ina in the “diving with a purpose” youth project where she learned a Caribbean pedagogy about connecting ancestry to present day search and research about sunken ships of the Transatlantic Slave Trade. 

Benefit of Membership - ASWM

Scholar Salons are a member benefit of ASWM. Save this date for the next ASWM Salon:

Salon 57 : September 7, 2023, 6 PM Eastern Time

A PaGaian Cosmology: Celebrating Goddess and Cosmogenesis”                  with Dr. Glenys Livingstone

Upcoming Salons are at 3pm Eastern Time, on September 21 (Hawaiian mythology) , October 5 (Artemis), October 19 ( Wheel of the Year), November 2  (Kurdish Shahmaran) & 16 (Legacy of Lydia Ruyle).

Announcing Scholar Salon 56: Register for July 27

Tona Ina, the Yoruba ‘sea light’: Community Arcaeomythology in Costa Rica’s Southern Caribbean

with Dr. María Suárez Toro

Thursday,  July 27, 2023 at 3 PM Eastern Time 

REGISTER HERE

 

Citizen science off the coast of Costa Rica

TONA INA (“Sea Light” in Yoruba), is a contemporary African, matriarchal, archetype, created in 2015, in order to tell stories about connections between the waters of Costa Rica’s Caribbean coast and “the deepest roots of identity, ancestral knowledge, and interactive symbiosis of our species as nature.” As the ancestral storyteller, she brings forth hidden historical facts about slavery and predatory patriarchal practices. Tona Ina also speaks for the women, giving voice to their tenacity as the “vital reserves” of our species; it is the women whose holistic thinking supports alternative paradigms such as the maternal gift economy.

African descendants and Bribri/Cabécar native pobladoras claim to see a light in the darkest nights in Punta Cahuita in the Cahuita National Park. In the sea waters near that Point, Afro-descendant and native scuba diving youth are researching two shipwrecks that may have been slave ships. This underwater archaeology project is recovering the history of the place and its people, as well as encouraging divers researching their own identities. By adding the perspective of archaeomythology, we can reclaim myths that are born through the interaction between ancient knowledge and memory, and also highlight present day responses from community members.

Dr. María Suárez Toro

Author Dr. María Suárez Toro is member of Centro Comunitario de Buceo Ambassadors of the Sea, director of Escribana feminist media, member of the Maternal Gift Economy Network, Diverse Women for Diversity, the Association of Women Writers in Costa Rica and now of the Association of Women and Mythology.  Maria is the author of many books, the latest two being “Tona Ina: La Misteriosa Cueva de un Pez León en Cahuita” and “Tona Ina: La Luz en el Mar Caribe”, both published by the University of Costa Rica in 2017 and 2021. 

Maria’s discussion will include remarks from  MSc Aaniyah Martin from South Africa and Dr. Joan Marley from the United States to explore the significance of creating a present day ancestral storyteller.

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Save this date for the next ASWM Salon:

Salon 57 : September 7, 2023, 6 PM Eastern Time

A PaGaian Cosmology: Celebrating Goddess and Cosmogenesis”                  with Dr. Glenys Livingstone

Upcoming Salons are on September 21, October 5 & 19, November 2 & 16.

Benefit of Membership - ASWM

The Salon recording will also be available to members after the event. 

Announcing Scholar Salon 55: Register for July 13

A Filmmaker’s Journey: ‘Give Light–Stories from Indigenous Midwives’

with Steph Smith

Thursday,  July 13, 2023 at 3 PM Eastern Time 

REGISTER HERE

 

Traditional midwives have assisted in births throughout human history. Yet the deep knowledge of these women is discounted, and they may even face persecuted by modern medical institutions. Steph Smith’s remarkable documentary “GIVE LIGHT: Stories from Indigenous Midwives links their stories across continents and in widely varied communities. In penetrating interviews, nine indigenous midwives from five continents discuss the benefits and challenges to their profession.  GIVE LIGHT examines traditional midwifery, juxtaposed with modern obstetrics, to bridge the gap between traditional wisdom and modern technology. In this Salon Steph reflects on the journey of meeting and listening to these inspiring practitioners, and of creating and funding this courageous film to honor their work.

Filmmaker Steph Smith

Steph Smith, filmmaker based in New Orleans, works as an independent director, cinematographer, and editor.   In October 2020, Steph was accepted into the Sundance Co//ab with the emphasis on GIVE LIGHT.  Her work has been invited to screen in Spain, France, Greece, Mexico, Sweden, England, Greece, South Africa, Nigeria, Mozambique, Portugal, Philippines, and USA.

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Save this date for the next ASWM Salon:

July 27 2023 3 pm Eastern Daylight Time

Tona Ina, the Yoruba “sea light”: Community Archaeomythology in Costa Rica’s Southern Caribbean                                                                                                                      with Maria Suarez Toro

Benefit of Membership - ASWM

The Salon recording will also be available to members after the event. 

Announcing Scholar Salon 54: Register for June 29

Water Worlds: Mermaids, The Drowning World, and Climate Change

with Brenda Peterson

Thursday,  June 29, 2023 at 3 PM Eastern Time 

REGISTER HERE

 

Art by tattoo artist Chris Thompson

Author Brenda Peterson asks, “Is our future amphibious?” In 2012 she posed the question in one of the first cli-fi (climate-fiction) novels, The Drowning World, and again in the sequel Tattoo Master. This Aquantis series is set in a future of tsunamis, Flood Lands, and characters who are half-dolphin, half-human. Brenda says, “The Drowning World is not a dystopian book; it is about learning to adapt to our own drastically changing water world. The young mermaid, Marina, who beaches on a flooded Siesta Key, Florida in 2040, must learn to shift into land legs and pass as human—to save both our world and hers.”

Brenda is currently writing a series of blog posts about mermaids. In the most recent one, she  poses this question about vampires: “Why would a woman want her life’s blood drained away to spend eternity with a dead man? Not my idea of romance. Mermaids offer more hope.”   Here’s the link to that essay.

Brenda Peterson

Through her work as a novelist and award-winning nature writer, Brenda Peterson’s curiosity about and respect for nature radiates through her many books. Her children’s book Leopard and Silkie was a winner of the National Science Teachers 2013 Award for “Outstanding Science Books for K-12.” Wolf Nation was chosen by Forbes as a Best Book of he Year and is out in audiobook from Audible.com.  The Drowning World, the first of Brenda’s series of novels for young adults, has been called “amazing and haunting in its themes and imaginative reach.” Brenda lives in Seattle on the Salish Sea. She is the founder of the Seattle-based grassroots conservation group Seal Sitters, which focuses on safety for seal pups on the beach. Her newest novel, Stiletto, a “cinematic psychological thriller,” has just been published on June 1.

Brenda Peterson is a fellow of Black Earth Institute (BEI). Founded by ASWM co-creator, the late Patricia Monaghan, with Michael McDermott, BEI is a community of artist-fellows and scholar-advisers creating a more ethical world. BEI seeks to help create a more just and deeply interconnected world and promote the health of the planet. To do so, artists are appointed as Fellows for a term and Scholars join as advisors. BEI then encourages and supports its present and past Fellows and Scholars to address social justice, environmental issues and the spiritual dimensions of the human condition in their art and work. The beautiful About Place Journal has featured the work of hundreds of artists and writers. Michael is a longtime member of ASWM’s Advisory Board, as BEI cooperates with ASWM to expand our reach to scholars and to develop special programs.

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Save this date for an upcoming ASWM Salon:

July 27 2023 3 pm Eastern Daylight Time

Tona Ina, the Yoruba “sea light”: Community Archaeomythology in Costa Rica’s Southern Caribbean with Maria Suarez Toro

 

 

Benefit of Membership - ASWM

The Salon recording will also be available to members after the event. 

Scholar Salon 49

Dr Andrea Fleckinger and Dr. Heide Goettner-Abendroth discuss Matriarchal Landscape Mythology. The Matriarchal Landscape Mythology (MLM) is a theory and a practice that allows rediscovering the matriarchal art of landscape formation and decodes landscapes in their ancient, sacred meanings.

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