Hallie Iglehart Austen 2023 Keynote: “New Myths for Restoring the Waters”

“Reweaving the Web of Life:  New Myths for Restoring the Waters and Ourselves”

Hallie Iglehart Austen

ASWM 2023 Conference May 5-6 2023

We are pleased to offer this important presentation to the general public as well as to our members.

Sunset at Monterey, California

“Reweaving the Web of Life: New Myths for Restoring the Waters and Ourselves” shows the importance of mythology in reestablishing kinship amongst humans and with non-humans for our planet to survive and how, inspired by our actions in this time of the Great Turning, our lives can become the myths for our descendants.

 “The recounting from my book, The Heart of the Goddess, of an Inuit shaman journeying to visit the Sea Goddess Sedna illustrates the direct and powerful way many indigenous cultures use myth to ensure environmental survival and spiritual practices to regain equilibrium. We can use such stories as inspiration to create new myths and new ways of being, not just looking to the past.

 “I weave indigenous wisdom and mythology from around the world with my story of founding in 2010 All One Ocean to highlight the urgency of learning about ocean plastics. My story is a part of our new mythology, one in which we work to decolonize our minds, bodies and souls and take action to reweave the fraying web of life.

 ” I have long imagined that we will each be diligently doing our work in this reweaving, sometimes unaware of one another. My vision is that eventually we will all meet in the center and turn around and see one another and the web of life that has been rewoven. It will look different than it originally did but it will be strong and vibrant— future myths for our descendants looking back at this critical time.”

Hallie Iglehart Austen, by Jude Mooney

Hallie Iglehart Austen has been a community organizer since 1968 and has taught since 1974. She grew up on a farm and has lived close to the earth for most of her life. Her lifelong interest in goddesses began at the age of twelve when she started studying ancient Greek language and mythology at Bryn Mawr School. She is the author of two influential books on women’s spirituality. Womanspirit: A Guide to Women’s Wisdom, describes her journey to discover women’s spiritual heritage and promotes meditation and the creation of a personal mythology. The Heart of the Goddess: Art, Myth and Meditations of the World’s Sacred Feminine, which focuses on multiple images and symbolism of goddesses from world cultures, has been called ” an exultantly female-centric text whose wisdom is universal.” It has recently been published in a new edition by Monkfish Press.

Hallie Iglehart Austen by Jude Mooney

In 2001, driven by her love of marine life, Hallie co-founded Seaflow: Protect Our Living Oceans to educate people about the dangers of active sonars and other ocean noise to whales, dolphins and all sea life. She continued her passion for sustainable living by building two model green homes, one in bamboo. In 2010, she initiated All One Ocean: Cleaning Up the Oceans, One Beach at a Time, to alert people to the hazards of ocean plastics and organize beach cleanups. She also offers her Wisdom Healing Zhineng Qigong classes by donation via Zoom.

Call for Proposals: Poster Session for 2023 Conference

Posters Due February 1, 2023

This year we will again feature a juried poster session at our conference, “Waters of Life: Mythos, Divinity, Beings and Ecology.”This is a great opportunity to explain your ideas and applied work in a more engaging way to a wider audience. During the poster session, participants will informally discuss their presentations with conference attendees. Posters will be displayed throughout the conference. Poster session participants place materials such as pictures, data, graphs, diagrams and narrative text on boards size A0 (33.1″ x 46.8”) or video. Video posters are short videos where the presenter discusses the nature and impact of their research/project which is illustrated on the printed poster they are displaying at the conference.

Presenters from all disciplines are welcome, as well as creative artists and practitioners whose work engages mythic themes in a scholarly manner.

As with paper presentations, posters should follow the conference themes found in our Call for Proposals.

Submit your information and 250 word abstract on the Submissions Form. Make sure to start your title with the word “POSTER” so that we will include it in the correct category.

All Poster Presenters must become members of ASWM.  If you have questions please contact us at  aswmsubmissions@gmail.com by January 25, 2023. ​Use “2023 poster proposal” and last name in the subject header of your email. ​Include a bio of up to 70 words and contact information including surface address and email. All Poster Presenters must become members of ASWM.

Natalie Sappier’s Water Spirits Flow through our Conference

 

“Salmon River” by Natalie Sappier

Our thanks to Samaqani Cocahq-(Natalie Sappier) for sharing her artwork with us for our 2023 Conference, “Waters of Life –  Mythos, Divinity, Beings and Ecology.” Our focus is on connections and relationships among people, animals, and the powerful elements necessary for life. Natalie’s painting “Salmon River” (2022) beautifully captures the vitality of living waters and the intention and spirit of our program.

Natalie  is a Wolastoqey Indigenous multidisciplinary storyteller from Tobique First Nation, New Brunswick, Canada. For her, creating visual art awakened her connection with land and her Wolastoqey knowing and being.

Her community and Ancestral landscapes (New Brunswick) are her teachers and are home to where she navigates stories and creativity. She realized early in her painting career that she was not painting just for herself-she was also painting for her people.

Natalie dedicates much of her time creating stories in her Fredericton Studio and carries a passion in the advocacy of Arts, Culture, Two Spirited Sacredness and Indigenous Youth Mentorship. She believes Wellness and Art strand together and Indigenous stories carry the medicine of spirit and voice that protects our Mother Earth.

See the multi-talented artist’s website here as it develops. In addition to her paintings and murals, Natalie has a passion for sharing stories and engaging with people through sharing of public works and workshops; read more about her work here and learn about her play “Finding Wolastok Voice.”

Member Registration for ASWM 2023 Conference

Information and member registration form for 2023 conference "Waters of Life--Exploring Mythos, Divinity, Beings and Ecology," May 5-6, 2023, in Syracuse NY at Crowne Plaza Hotel.

Hi! Looks like you first must log in below to view this Members Only content.

If you are not yet a member, and you would like to view this content, please click Join & Renew to pay for an annual membership.

If you Forgot Password - Reset here to receive an email with a reset link. Or, when you are logged in, click on Account from the menu above, then the Change Password link on that page.

Email us if you need assistance anytime at membership@womenandmyth.org - The ASWM Membership Team

Login Here:

2023 ASWM Conference “The Waters of Life” Call for Proposals

Conference Call for Proposals

The Waters of Life – Exploring Water Mythos, Divinity, Beings & Ecology

May 5th and 6th, 2023

Crowne Plaza, Syracuse New York

This conference will provide the opportunity to explore myths from around the world of water Goddesses, water creatures and water itself in cultural, spiritual, historical, and ecological contexts.  Water as one of the Elements (Earth, Air, Fire, Water) is recognized as a building block of everything on earth from the spiritual to the mundane in multiple spiritual traditions and Water as 50%-60% of our bodies is scientifically recognized as an elemental component of life, crucial for survival.   Indigenous peoples honor the intertwining of life and water and hold it as sacred in ritual, story and everyday life, while the industrial world has reduced it to a commodity.  With the onset of global warming, a consciousness is arising of the need for respect, reverence and protection for our water sources – a time to look back and around to gather the wisdom of Water Keepers, past and present, around the globe.  Potential topics include, though are not limited to: 

  • Water Mythos Grounded in Reality & Science
  • Exploring Beings, Myths and Ecology of our Aqueous Worlds
  • Oceans Infinite but Endangered- Exploring Water-based Mythology and Ecology
  • New views on key species in myth and in the real world such as: cranes/waterbirds, sharks, whales, octopuses
  • Indigenous sciences and traditional technologies
  • Interrelationships of water, water beings and ecosystems in myth and science
  • Ethical perspectives in the use of sacred stories
  • Emerging new perspectives in post-humanism that grant agency to non-human beings
  • Methodologies for inclusions of mysteries in traditional and academic research
  • Place wisdom, environmental resilience, identity and myth
  • Examining racial and gender intersectionality in history and myth, nature and society
  • Indigenous science and climate change: decolonizing environmental and ecological knowledge, environmental justice
  • Violence against women and the planet: commodification/pollution of water, extinction of species
  • Transnational perspectives on climate change, indigenous women’s knowledge, and the role of non-human species
  • Natural resource management and indigenous methods

Given the location of our conference, these topics are also relevant:

  • Narratives of women, social and environmental justice related to Seneca Falls
  • Exploring history, myth, inclusions and exclusions of the early Women’s Suffrage movement at Seneca Falls

We especially encourage proposals from First Nations women of the Americas,  Indigenous women, internationally, and women of color.

We are accepting proposals for papers, panels, and posters. All proposal abstracts (no longer than 250 words) and a short (70 words or fewer) bio for each Presenter are to be submitted on this form.

Check out our tips on writing proposals.

Deadline for papers, panels and posters  is February 1, 2023.