
THE HISTORICAL TRAUMA MASTER CLASS COHORTS of 2018 & 2019


Volume 3 of Proceedings of the Association for the Study of
Women and Mythology
Edited by Mary Jo Neitz and Sid Reger
We launched Volume 3 of our conference proceedings on Saturday, March 14, during our biennial ASWM Conference. In this collection, the works of 18 scholars explore many connections of myth, land, and women’s lives, including wildness, prehistoric art and archaeology, and contemporary goddess traditions.
“This luminous volume is filled with myth and story tied to the land and Her deepest embedded wisdom and mysteries”. —Dr. Cristina Eisenberg, The Wolf’s Tooth and The Carnivore Way
“The Land Remembers Us is a valuable contribution to the literature of place, the earth and the sacred.” —Michael McDermott M.D., co-founder with Patricia Monaghan and director of the Black Earth Institute
“This collection of essays contains some poignant explanations of the multifold ways our spirits can connect to the intelligences of the land, the plants, the animals, the cells, and to the spiritual energies on our wonderfully diverse planet.” —Miriam Robbins Dexter, Whence the Goddesses: A Source Book
Purchase The Land Remembers Us at Amazon

We have added a special pre-conference event for those attending our conference. Join us for a private tour with docent and dinner at the Indian Pueblo Cultural Center, https://www.indianpueblo.org Price includes round trip transportation from Tamaya Resort to the Center in Albuquerque, museum admission, private tour with a docent and catered buffet dinner, with meat, vegetarian and vegan options. Shuttle leaves Tamaya Resort at 5:15 pm and departs the Cutural Center at 8:15pm, for a 9pm return to the Tamaya Resort.
It is required that all participants register and pay in advance, as the meal will be catered. To register, send $71 via PayPal from the ASWM donation page, https://womenandmyth.org/
Jane’s presentation will be Skyped into the conference.

Feminist social critic Jane Caputi is Professor of Women, Gender and Sexuality Studies at Florida Atlantic University. In 2016, she was named as Eminent Scholar of the Year by the Popular Culture Association. She has written three books, The Age of Sex Crime (1987), Gossips, Gorgons and Crones (1993), and Goddesses and Monsters: Women, Myth, Power and Popular Culture (2004), and collaborated with Mary Daly on Websters’ First New Intergalactic Wickedary of the English Language (1987).
She also has made two educational documentaries, The Pornography of Everyday Life (2006, Berkeley Media) and Feed the Green: Feminist Voices for the Earth (2015, Women Make Movies).
Her new book, Call Your “Mutha’” A Deliberately Dirty-Minded Manifesto for the Earth Mother in the Anthropocene, is being published by Oxford University Press in August 2020, in a series on “Heretical Thinking” edited by Ruth O’Brien.
Feed The Green: Feminist Voices for the Earth was inspired by one of the most powerful dreams that ever came to Jane, giving her the phrase “Feed the Green”: “We do this in multiple ways – material, intellectual, spiritual, emotional – listening to and responding to the call of the Green, always returning energy to the Source.”
Feed the Green features a variety of feminist thinkers, including ecological and social justice advocates Vandana Shiva, Starhawk and Andrea Smith, ecosexual activists Annie Sprinkle and Beth Stephens; ecofeminist theorist and disability rights activist Ynestra King, poet Camille Dungy, scholars and bloggers Janell Hobson and Jill Schneiderman and grass roots activist La Loba Loca. “ßTheir voices are powerfully juxtaposed with images from popular culture, including advertising, myth, art, and the news, pointing to the ways that an environmentally destructive worldview is embedded in popular discourses, both contemporary and historical.”–Container.
Jane says, “We think we’re doing it all. But the animals are doing the real work of holding it all together, and keeping us on our path. As are the plants. It’s as if we think the stars and sun and moon and the earth itself aren’t doing any work.”
We are pleased to announce that internationally acclaimed singer-songwriter Wendy Rule will perform on Friday evening of our 2020 conference.
“Hearing her perform live is an incredible experience that can easily be described as atmospheric, bewitching, and Otherworldly.”--Kelden Mercury

With the release of her latest double album ‘Persephone’, Wendy’s work continues to defy categorization. This exciting project is “a beautifully evocative retelling of the Ancient Greek myth of the Goddess Persephone’s descent into the Underworld and the ensuing grief of her mother Demeter, the Goddess of the Grain.”
Since her first album Zero was released in 1996, this visionary songstress has combined elements of gothic, folk, world, ambient and cabaret music, and crossed over into Pagan and New Age categories with her many mythological, esoteric, and ritual references. Renowned for her extraordinary voice and live shows that blur the line between music, ritual and theatre, Wendy has gained a loyal following in Australia, the USA, Europe and the UK. From the most intimate solo house concerts to large festival gigs, Wendy takes her audience on an otherworldly journey of depth and passion.
In 2014 Wendy relocated from her hometown of Melbourne, Australia to the USA, and is now living in the beautiful High Desert city of Santa Fe, New Mexico – allowing her an even stronger connection to her ever growing US fanbase, and providing daily access to the wild Nature that inspires her unique and transformational work.
“I follow a very eclectic, improvisational, ever-changing Magical path, focused on Nature and her cycles. I honour the Light and the Dark in equal measure. I’m in love with the Moon, and have honoured every Dark and Full Moon for decades.”
Learn more at www.wendyrule.com Or join her Patreon site to hear special monthly concerts based on the astrological sign of the full moon .