“Water Worlds: Mermaids, The Drowning World, and Climate Change”
with Brenda Peterson
Thursday, June 29, 2023 at 3 PM Eastern Time
Facebook Live Promo Interview on 6/28/23:

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.

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

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



Your first book, Womenspirit, A Guide to Women’s Wisdom, published in 1983, grew out of your voyage of discovery, promoting the practice of meditation and the creation of a personal mythology. For your second book, The Heart of the Goddess: Art, Myth and Meditations of the World’s Sacred Feminine, you collected remarkable images and symbols of goddesses from world cultures. It has been hailed as “an exultantly female-centric text whose wisdom is universal.” First published in 1991, this beloved book has now been released in a new edition by Monkfish press.
In the 2000s you were inspired by your work with the divine feminine to focus on initiatives for the protection of oceans and sea life. In 2001 you co-founded Seaflow: Protect Our Oceans to educate people about the dangers of active sonars and other ocean noise to whales, dolphins, and all sea life. In 2010 you initiated All One Ocean: Cleaning Up the Oceans, One Beach at a Time. This work of organizing people to come together on local projects of habitat restoration sets an example of how forming grassroots initiatives can make a difference for the fate of the planet, its oceans and sea creatures.
Your work has combined your knowledge of indigenous Goddess wisdom with activism for the environment in a way that is truly inspirational. Our board and members honor you as one of the premier visionary feminist thinkers of our time, and thank you for your scholarly, literary, healing, and cultural leadership.
The ASWM awards program was established by our co-founder, Patricia Monaghan, to advance the best work in the field of goddess studies. Previous honorees for the Demeter Award have included Margot Adler (2010), Charlene Spretnak (2012), Jean Shinoda Bolen (2014), Elinor Gadon and Lucia Chiavola Birnbaum (2016), Kathy Jones (2018), and Vicki Noble and Judy Grahn (2020). 



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