Virtual Film Festival for Women’s History Month

To commemorate International Women’s Day and Women’s History Month, Women Make Movies (WMM) is hosting a virtual film festival that highlights the new releases in our Transnational Feminist Film collection.

Women Make Movies provides services to filmmakers and educators, and distributes over 700 films by and about women worldwide. WMM has worked with ASWM to bring the best of women’s films to our events and film series.

Throughout March, festival attendees will receive free access to select films about women from around the globe. New films will be added each week and will be available for viewing at no cost for the duration of the festival (March 1 – March 31, 2020).

Our thanks to the women of WMM for bringing us together in this way to celebrate women’s lives this month and every month!

You may sign up here to enjoy the 2020 free films.

Announcing Conference Schedule/Abstracts

Here are abstracts of our wonderful panels and presentations. Thank you for bearing with us during a period of last-minute changes.  Please understand that our Schedule is subject to change right up until the day of the conference. 

2020 CONFERENCE SCHEDULE rev

2020 ASWM CONFERENCE ABSTRACTS

2020 ASWM CONFERENCE SCHEDULE
All times and locations subject to change as necessary. 

Continue reading “Announcing Conference Schedule/Abstracts”

ASWM Conference is Taking Place As Planned

Letter to Registrants Confirming ASWM 2020 Conference is still happening.

 

The ASWM Board called a special meeting to address concerns that the novel coronavirus is presenting. By overwhelming agreement, we are proceeding with our plans to host this event on the Santa Ana Pueblo at the end of this week. Our hearts go out to those affected.

 

We know that these issues are much on the minds of everyone who is planning to attend our conference. Our plan is to follow the guidelines from the CDC and to proceed with the event. We have carefully crafted a program that includes presentations by women scholars and activists from the nearby Pueblos, and we have arranged to videotape those and many other sessions. It would be very difficult to replicate this program at another time or place.

 

Here is what the CDC says about domestic travel:

 

See the map at this address: https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/travelers/index.html

 

Takeaway: The United States is considered in the lowest level of risk for travel.

 

And from CDC FAQs: Should I cancel my trip?  https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/travelers/faqs.html

Watch Level 1: CDC does not recommend canceling or postponing travel to destinations with level 1 travel notices because the risk of COVID-19 is thought to be low.

We are working with the hotel to maintain a healthy environment. Hand sanitizers will be available. Our board and planners also believe that our work goes beyond conference sessions to promote healing and well being. We will practice and encourage modified behaviors such as “jazz hands” instead of handshakes and hugs, etc.

 

We look forward to seeing you. If you must cancel, unless you request a refund in writing to aswmevents@gmail.com, we will assume your cancelled conference fees are a donation to ASWM to help offset costs this year. We thank you for your generosity. We do encourage those who are ill not to attend.

 

Our cancellation policy is: The cancellation fee between March 1 and March 12, 2020 is $50.
 Sorry, we cannot refund ASWM annual dues.
 There will be no refund for cancellations after March 12, 2020.

 

Thank you for your continued support. We look forward to collaborating with you.

Warmly,  The ASWM Board

2020 Conference Panel on Historical Trauma and Recovery

THE HISTORICAL TRAUMA MASTER CLASS COHORTS of 2018 & 2019
This dynamic and intuitive training offers a unique approach to recover from complex traumatic events with researched and culturally relevant tools. A somatic, body-based approach which cultivates personal and cultural memory; clears emotional patterns; breaks personal trends of abuse, addiction, struggle and grief; tracks patterns of sexual abuse, remedies chronic pain and repetitive injury; and heals relational dynamics. We look through the lens of a 7 generational recovery approach – with the primary focus being on what is happening currently.
Panelists Laura Fragua-Cota, Shara Moscinska (2018 Cohort), Holly Chee and Beverly Billie (2019 Cohort) reflect on the training and its impact in their communities.
The Historical Trauma Master Class is led by Dr. Ruby Gibson,  Executive Director of Freedom Lodge, which hosts the Black Hills Historical Trauma Research & Recovery Center. Dr Gibson has developed two intergenerational healing models – Somatic Archaeology© and Generational Brainspotting,™ Accessing our Body and Mother Earth as the sources of biological, emotional and ancestral wisdom, her researched tools and techniques impart knowledge and provide hope to those seeking remedies to personal and cultural suffering.
Dr. Gibson’s book, My Body, My Earth: The Practice of Somatic Archaeology, will be available at the Conference Marketplace.

 

Announcing Volume 3 of Proceedings

 

The Land Remembers Us:

Women, Myth, and Nature

 

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 

“From the earliest awakenings of the Women’s Spirituality movement, our yearning to know about women’s sacred engagements with nature through the ages was inherent. This collection of insightful articles brings so much to fruition — with concepts such as Gaian epistemology, language of animacy, women’s weaving as sacred transformations with nature, and much more. It enlarges the scholarship of cultural history by way of laying out a grand banquet.”  Charlene Spretnak,  Lost Goddesses of Early Greece
                                                            

“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 

The Land Remembers Us may be purchased from Goddess Ink and other online booksellers.