Symposium Program for Portland

Pre-register by Friday, April 3, 2015!

We are so excited to see everyone at our April 11 Symposium in Portland! Symposium registration ends Friday evening, April 3. After April 3, registration can made on a walk-in basis at the Symposium on April 11. Lunch may not be able to be included for walk-in registrations. Register soon, and we will see you in Portland!

Your Room at the Red Lion Hotel on the River  (503) 283-4466

Please reserve your room right away to get our conference rate:  Red Lion Reservation Link

PROGRAM SCHEDULE AND ABSTRACTS

Our program is set for the 2015 Symposium. We are excited about the quality and variety of presentations—thanks to all of our presenters. See below for the list of panels and presentations and a PDF of Abstracts. . We are also happy to include pre-symposium events that will be of interest but are not organized by ASWM.

Check out the complete Schedule! 2015 Program Schedule

NEW:  Abstracts 2015  Alphabetical by author, summary of presentations

Friday 7:30 PM at Red Lion Hotel on the River

Special presentation by ASWM and Black Earth Institute

“Can the Blessed Virgin hold the heart of goddess women?” A Celebration and reading from Patricia Monaghan’s Mary:  A Life in Verse  with Michael McDermott

Saturday April 11, Registration 7:30 AM

Program 8:30 AM to 6:15 PM at Red Lion Hotel on the River

“Tales and Totems: Myth and Lineage in Goddess Scholarship” 

  • “Who Is Telling the Story? A Few Remarks on the Mythic Imagination” Keynote Presentation with Susan Griffin
  • ASWM Awards Ceremony:
  • Brigit Award for Excellence in the Arts, to Women of We’Moon
  • Saga Special Recognition for Contribution to Women’s History, to Z Budapest 
  • “Goddess Lineage, Rituals and Community” with Z Budapest
  • “Huntress and Hearth: Artemis and Hestia and the Balance of Connection and Solitude in Group Experience”
  • “Sacred Presences in Secular Time: Myth and the Rebirth of the Old Goddesses of Europe” 
  • “Through Words, Pictures, Ceremonies: Feminist Spirituality and Cultural Identity”  
  • “Mother Earth: Fertile, Feminine and Feminist”
  • “In the beginning was the Goddess: The Devi of Speech, Perception and Embodiment” 
  • “Guidance at the Thresholds: Goddess Spirituality and the Myth of Journeys.”
  • “Destabilizing Gender, Decolonizing Place: Sacred Tales of Spirit Transformations” 
  • “Devotion, Death and Dynamism: The Many Faces of Mary Magdalene”
  • “Goddesses of the living Land: Oregon Women’s Lands, Wisdom Circles, and Living Goddess Cultures”
  • “Women Artists of We’Moon”

 AND STAY FOR  Sacred Shindig: A Sharing Time,  free and open to the public

Saturday night, April 11 7:30 PM at Red Lion Hotel on the River

hosted by Women of We’Moon

SACRED SHINDIG: A Sharing Circle

with Goddess play, Goddess stories, songs, jokes

and other shenanigans!

Wear your Sacred Garb!

Be ready for interactive surprises and

a Circle of Participatory Power

2015 Keynote by Susan Griffin

SusanGriffin_DS

“Who Is Telling the Story? A Few Remarks on the Mythic Imagination”

The wondrous events and magic depicted in myth mirror the creative process of storytelling in countless ways. Using her own experience as a writer as well as that of other contemporary and classic writers and poets, Griffin will describe the often mysterious alchemical process by which words and rhymes, plots, turns of plots, characters, scenes and even whole landscapes enter the imaginary realm of the tale, a process which challenges many of the dualities engrained in modern consciousness. 

Susan Griffin  was born in Los Angeles California in 1943, in the midst of the Second World War and the holocaust, and these events had a lasting effect on her thinking. She draws deep connections between the destruction of nature, the diminishment of women, and racism, and she traces the causes of war to denial in both private and public life.   Her work moves beyond the boundaries of form and perception. She is known for her innovative style. Her groundbreaking book Woman and Nature, is an extended prose-poem that inspired the ecofeminist movement.

In A Chorus of Stonesthe Private Life of War, Griffin blends history and memoir. Her most recent book, Wrestling with the Angel of Democracy, the Autobiography of an American Citizen  (published by Trumpeter books in April, 2008) explores the state of mind that engenders and sustains democracy.

Her “social autobiography,” A Chorus of Stones, was a finalist for both the Pulitzer Prize and the National Book Critics Award, winner of the BABRA Award in 1992, and also a NY Times Notable Book of the Year. Her play Voices, which won an Emmy in 1975 for a local PBS production, has been performed throughout the world, including a radio production by the BBC.  In 2009 she was awarded a Guggenheim Foundation Fellowship.

Additionally, she has been named by Utne Reader as one of a hundred important visionaries for the new millennium.

Registration for 2015 Symposium Is Now Open

At the link below you’ll find the registration pages for our 2015 Symposium.  You’ll be offered the chance to join when you register, giving you member rates for the event.  Please remember that if you have received confirmation that you are presenting, you must join ASWM in order to be part of the program.

Register here for 2015 “Tales and Totems:  Myth and Lineage in Goddess Scholarship”

And reserve your room  here:  Red Lion Hotel Reservation Link.

Call for Papers, 2015 Symposium “Tales and Totems”

BeeG.oldgold 

ASWM Symposium Portland, OR

April 11th 2015 

 Call for Proposals

“Tales and Totems: Lineage and Myth in Goddess Scholarship”

 

The work of Goddess Scholarship is intrinsically bound within a framework where we actively seek out, document, and honor the stories and concerns that animated the lives of our foremothers. We do this so that these stories will contribute meaningfully in the context of modern life.  The research methodologies have focused on representing our historical, thealogical, philosophical, mythological, symbolic, cultural, linguistic and aesthetic lineages.

In keeping with this emphasis of our methodology and our discipline, and embracing the sacred Nature of this year’s conference location in the Pacific Northwest rich with the tales and totems of the First Nations, we invite papers and panels including, but not limited to the following topics:

·       Tales and totems of the Pacific Northwest

·       Ancestry, foremothers and methodology

·       Prehistory, history and changing experiences of the sacred and the profane

·       Shakti, prakriti, and purusha from east to west

·       Goddess myths, clans, and communities

·       Cultural ecofeminism

·       Myth and lineage of sacred places

·       Animals as totems and symbols

·       Creation stories of the First Nations, particularly the Pacific North West

·       Indigenous myths, aboriginal histories, and women’s communities

·       First Nations, First Worlds, Third Worlds and the global environmental crises

·       Totems and symbolic language

·       Goddess lineage, rituals and community

·       Mother earth, motherhood and matriarchy

·      Altars in the home, nature and at work

Papers should be 20 minutes; panels with up to four papers on a related topic may be proposed together. Workshop proposals should be organized to provide audience interaction and must clearly address the theme. All sessions and workshops are limited to 90 minutes.

Presenters from all disciplines are welcome, as well as creative artists and practitioners who engage mythic themes in a scholarly manner in their work. Presenters must become members of ASWM.

Send 250-word abstract (for panels, 200 word abstract plus up to 150 words per paper) in PDF or MSWord to aswmsubmissions@gmail.com by November 15,2014. Use “2015 proposal” in subject header.  Include bio of up to 70 words for each presenter, as well as contact information including surface address and email.   See www.womenandmyth.org for program updates and registration.

2015 ASWM Symposium in Portland OR

BeeG.oldgold

“Tales and Totems:  Lineage and Myth in Goddess Scholarship”

Following this theme that reflects the rich traditions of the Pacific Northwest, we will hold our 2015 Regional Symposium in Portland, OR on April 11, 2015.   Please save the date to join us in Portland, and check this site for updated information about program and registration.

Here’s the Call for Proposals.  We welcome papers and workshops from academic presenters, practitioners, and graduate students.