Scholar Salon 36

“The Fire of Umai, a call to our sacred Indigenous power” with Apela Colorado Thursday,  February 10, 2022 Moderated by Kathryn Henderson As told in the final chapter of her recently released book Woman Between the Worlds, Apela Colorado, PhD, and a group of healers were hiking a mountain in Kyrgyzstan 12 years ago, passing …

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Scholar Salon 35

Scholar Salon 35: "Listening to the Land" Novelist Elizabeth Cunningham shares how her encounters with place shaped The Maeve Chronicles, a series of award-winning novels featuring a feisty Celtic Magdalen. During her twenty years of research and writing, Elizabeth traveled to the Hebrides, Wales, Italy, Israel, France, Turkey, and England. Over and over, she discovered that the land itself has stories to tell to those who will listen

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Pre-publication ~ ASWM Proceedings: “Maternal Thinking”

MATERNAL THINKING:  Gifts, Mothers’ Bodies, and Earth

We are putting the finishing touches on Volume 4 of our Proceedings anthologies, and we anticipate the launch in June of this year. For now, we are offering a special pre-publication discount, and discounts on Volumes 1 – 3, for anyone who attends the symposium.

The Association for the Study of Women and Mythology is dedicated to presenting the stories and values of cultures that honor our mother the earth and life-giving relationships of reciprocity and gift giving among all who dwell here. Our Proceedings Volume 4 draws on “maternal thinking”, a feminist perspective that reflects on  mothering as a model for and a model of caring relations that involve gift giving and reciprocity.  This expansive conception of mothering is not limited to biological mothers.  Several contributions by indigenous women share stories honoring care-giving practices taught to humans by other than humans, including the earth, elemental forces of nature, and various animals and other living creatures. Other chapters bring new understandings of mothering relations in myths and goddess stories from Europe as well as Kurdish culture, ancient Jewish writings, and Buddhism.  Maternal thinking enriches our understanding of the past and feeds a vision of the future in which all life is respected and preserved.  

MATERNAL THINKING   V4 Table of Contents

See the Symposium page for more information.

REGISTER HERE FOR SYMPOSIUM:

  • General public ($160) register  here.  
  • Members sign in and register with $50 discount here.  
  • Join/Renew your ASWM membership here.
  • Questions? Ask us: symposium@womenandmyth.org

Organizations in the Arts and Culture Hall

Graduate Programs, Publications, and Online Resources

We are excited to offer Arts and Culture Hall “booths” where organizations related to our mission share resources through videos and links, and may be available for face-to-face conversations with you!  You may access these booths any time from April 3 to April 18 2022,  by signing in (after you register) and selecting the Culture Hall at the top menu. Sign up at the booth to receive news about their work, see their videos, leave messages, and meet other attendees at the “table” at each booth.

Maternal Gift Economy  ~ Movement

CIIS Women’s Spirituality Program


Southwestern College Visionary Practice and Regenerative Leadership  Program

Goddess, Ink 

 

Symposium: Arts and Culture Hall ~ Lauren Raine and Yoga Nidra Network

Meet Presenters in Our Arts and Culture Hall:

Lauren Raine, Yoli Maya Yeh and Umā Dinsmore-Tuli 

We are excited to offer Arts and Culture Hall “booths” where some of our great presenters will share their work through videos and links, and maybe even in face-to-face conversations with you! There are also booths for academic programs and other resources. You may access these booths any time from April 3 to April 18m,  by signing in after you register and selecting the Culture Hall at the top menu. Sign up at the booth to receive news about their work, see their videos, leave messages, and meet other attendees at the “table” at each booth.  Two of these feature work by:

Lauren Raine (Earthspeak) and Yoli Maya Yeh and Umā Dinsmore-Tuli (Yoga Nidra Network)

Lauren Raine: “Earth-speak: Envisioning a Conversant World”

In 2018 I attended the Gatekeepers Conference on sacred sites & pilgrimage and made a personal pilgrimage to Avebury, Silbury Hill, Glastonbury, and other sites. EARTHSPEAK explores a mythic, historical, poetic and subjective response to these geomantically potent sites, in particular Silbury Hill, the largest prehistoric monument in Europe, with research that suggests it was at one time a representation of the body of the Earth Mother. EARTHSPEAK also suggests that Geomantic reciprocity occurs as human beings bring intentionality to a particular place, making it a holy or sacred place. Numinous communion with “spirit of place” can become increasingly active as it accrues mythic power in the memory of the people, and in the land. Sacred places have both an innate and a developed capacity to bring about altered states of consciousness, especially if people come prepared within the liminal state of pilgrimage.

Lauren Raine Portrait
Lauren Raine

Lauren Raine MFA is a cross-disciplinary artist best known for her Masks of the Goddess collection. She was resident artist at Henry Luce Center for the Arts & Religion, an Aldon B. Dow Fellow, and Resident Artist for Cherry Hill Seminary. Her work can be seen at: www.laurenraine.com.

Yoli Maya Yeh and Umā Dinsmore-Tuli:  “Please, Humans – Get Some Sleep!” Listening to Yoga Nidrā Shakti Devī – Goddess of Rest

Yoga Nidrā Śakti is a South Asian Goddess of sleep, rest, and liminal spaces between dreaming and waking. A key figure in The Greatness of the Goddess (Devī Mahātmyam, c600BC), her Sanskrit name literally means ‘power of sleep’. She features in many images and indigenous story rituals, all describing her power to send every being (including gods) to sleep; she restores right relationship to cyclical rhythms of rest that hold life in balance. Wherever she appears, Nidrā Śakti counters transgressions of those who refuse to sleep, returning all beings to right relationship with natural cycles. Yoganidrā is also a state of yogic rest that supports healing for out-of-balance human experiences such as insomnia, anxiety and post-traumatic stress disorder. Sadly, the presence of Nidrā Śakti has been marginalised and eradicated from commercial and traditional yoga schools profiting from methods of the popular practice bearing her name: yoga nidrā. Through stories and exquisite images, we explore the liminality of Nidrā Śakti as goddess of thresholds between sleep and dream.

Yoli Maya Yeh

Yoli Maya Yeh is a Yoga & Shiatsu Therapist & Educator in Comparative Religions & Global Studies, working at intersections of Indigenous Preservation, Healing Arts & Social Justice through her experiential education-based Decolonization Toolkit. Raised in her family’s Native American spiritual teachings, she spent 12 years of young adulthood studying language, yoga, tantra, healing arts & meditation in India.

 

Uma Dinsmore-Tuli

Umā Dinsmore-Tuli and Yoli Maya Yeh are collaborative educators from the Yoga Nidra Network, a radical post-lineage organisation training yoga nidrā facilitators to make yoga nidrā freely accessible to all humans in their mother tongue. Umā is a yoga therapist and writer whose books include Yoni Shakti, Nidrā Śakti, and Yoga Nidrā Made Easy.