2020 Conference Presentation by Judy Grahn: “Living in a Sentient World”

 

Judy is unable to attend the conference. We are hoping to Skype in her presentation. Please check the updated conference schedule.

“For forty years I’ve been thinking and writing about the intense psychic connections we can experience with creatures, including insects, that live around us, incorporating them in my poetry and my novel, Mundane’s World, as well as in stories.  This paper will discuss how to recognize and induce these connections of inter-species consciousness (shared sacred space), how to record and believe the experiences, and then how to write them.  My goal is to share these accounts with more skeptical humans in order to reduce both cynicism and romanticism, to strengthen bonds between people and creature life, to encourage recognition of shared minds, and to amplify the value we place on beings who share space with us. I’ll illustrate the topic with selections from my current work in progress.”

Judy Grahn is internationally known as a poet, author and cultural theorist. She has published fourteen books, with two more forthcoming. Judy holds a Ph.D. in Integral Studies from the California Institute of Integral Studies, where she often teaches. She is retired co-director and core faculty of the Women’s Spirituality MA program at New College of California, and the Institute of Transpersonal Psychology and Sofia University.

2020 Conference: Vicki Noble, “Women’s Blood: the Sacred Waters of Life”

“It cannot be an accident that the first act of so many women in the Goddess movement was to reclaim and resacralize the menstrual cycle. In fact, menstruation may be a root cause for the so-called “leap” into the human species—one of the breakaway events that allowed human evolution to take place, distinguishing us from all other primates.

I hope to show that it was this lunar menstrual cycle that gave rise to the first collective human rituals and community celebrations, as well as whole systems of ancient mathematics and scientific understandings that led to the building of stone circles, medicine wheels, and eventually the temples and churches of the modern era.”

 

 

Vicki Noble is a feminist artist, healer, writer, and wisdom teacher, co-creator of Motherpeace and author of numerous books including Motherpeace: A Way to the Goddess, Shakti Woman: Feeling Our Fire, Healing Our World, and The Double Goddess: Women Sharing Power. For decades she has traveled and taught internationally; her books are translated and published in various languages. Retired from teaching, Vicki facilitates private intensive tutorials and master classes for students and individual clients who come from around the world to study Motherpeace Tarot, learn Tibetan Buddhist Dakini practices especially adapted for them, or to simply deepen their understanding of ancient civilizations of the Goddess in prehistory and contemporary matriarchal cultures.

https://www.vickinoble.com

 

 

Registration

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:

2020 Keynote Speaker Annette Williams: The Feminine Power of àjẹ́

 

Among the West African Yoruba, àjẹ́ is the power of the feminine, of female divinity and women, and àjẹ́ is the women themselves who wield this power.  Women who are àjẹ́ have held power in religious, political, judicial, and economic domains, and àjẹ́ have also been branded as witches, feared, and persecuted. Oral history, myth, and ritual assist in understanding the roles and functions of the Yoruba àjẹ́ as well as reactions to their power from pre-colonial to contemporary times. Through appreciating àjẹ́ we reclaim the timeless female power of transformation.


Annette Williams is chair and core faculty in the Women’s Spirituality program at the California Institute of Integral Studies.  She holds a doctorate in Philosophy and Religion with specialization in Women’s Spirituality.  Her dissertation, Our Mysterious Mothers: The Primordial Feminine Power of Àjẹ́ in the Cosmology, Mythology, and Historical Reality of the West African Yoruba, was a recipient of the 2016 ASWM Kore Award for best dissertation in women and mythology. Her research interests have centered on soul healing from sexual trauma, and the theme of women’s spiritual power and agency within the Yorùbá Ifá tradition, with specific reference to the feminine authority of àjẹ́

 

Register for the 2020 event!

Call for Proposals: 2020 Poster Session for ASWM Conference

Due January 5, 2020

This year we will feature a juried poster session at our conference. 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, and 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.

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

Send a 250 word abstract in PDF or MSWord to aswmsubmissions@gmail.com by November 23, 2019. ​Use “2020 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. Presenters from all disciplines are welcome, as well as creative artists and practitioners whose work engages mythic themes in a scholarly manner. Poster Presenters must become members of ASWM.