“Hearing the Invisible” Special Plenary Panel

Plenary Panel: Engaging Interconnectedness: Lessons from Sentient  Beings/Ecosystems

 We are honored to present this panel of women whose work advances the essential conversations of an interrelated world, protecting and fostering the unique contributions of ecosystems, people, and other sentient beings to the dialogue of life on earth. This panel will be followed by an opportunity for panelists to respond to one another, as well as a Q & A with attendees.

Asoka Bandarage, PhD: “Paradigm Shift: From Domination to Partnership”

Dr. Cristina Eisenberg: “Honoring Reciprocity: Collaborating with Indigenous Peoples on Traditional  Ecological Knowledge” 

Denise Mitten, PhD: “Blurring boundaries and disturbing dichotomies”

Apela Colorado, PhD: “Manuakepa ~ Reawaken Our Power to Connect”

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“Paradigm Shift: From Domination to Partnership”

Dr. Asoka Bandarage

Asoka Bandarage, PhD, formerly Chair of the Women’s Studies Program at Mount Holyoke College, is currently Distinguished Adjunct Professor at the California Institute for Integral Studies. She has also taught at Yale University, Brandeis University, Macalester College, Georgetown University, and European Peace University. She is the author of Women, Population and Global Crisis and Sustainability and Well-Being: The Middle Path to Environment, Society and the Economy, and other publications. Asoka is a co-founder of the Committee on Women, Population and Health, and served as guest editor of Political Environments and Woman of Power. She conducts workshops on social change and works with the Interfaith Moral Action on Climate.

 

“Manuakepa ~ Reawaken Our Power to Connect”                                    

Dr. Apela Colorado

Apela Colorado, PhD, of Oneida-Gaul ancestry, has dedicated her life’s work to bridging Western thought and indigenous worldviews. As a Ford Fellow, Dr. Colorado studied for her doctorate at both Harvard and Brandeis Universities and received her PhD from Brandeis in Social Policy in 1982. She founded the Worldwide Indigenous Science Network (WISN) in 1989 to foster the revitalization, growth, and worldwide exchange of traditional knowledge, develop an authentic interface with Western science, and safeguard the lives and work of the world’s endangered indigenous culture practitioners. In 1997, Dr. Colorado was one of twelve women chosen from 52 countries by the State of the World Forum to be honored for her role as a woman leader.

 

“Honoring Reciprocity: Collaborating with Indigenous Peoples on Traditional  Ecological Knowledge” 

Dr. Cristina Eisenberg

Dr. Cristina Eisenberg is graduate faculty at Oregon State University in the College of Forestry. An Indigenous woman scientist, she is the principal investigator on two major on-the-ground projects with First Nations (Alberta, Canada) and Native American (Montana, USA) communities to integrate Traditional Ecological Knowledge (TEK) into plant and wildlife conservation in Western North America. The former Chief Scientist at Earthwatch Institute, Cristina oversaw a global research program focusing on ecological restoration, social justice for Indigenous peoples, and sustainable production of natural resources. She serves on the board of Society for Ecological Restoration, where she chairs the TEK Working Group. She has written two books about conservation and  keystone predators and is at work on two more under contract, one about climate change and wildlife and another about bison conservation.

 

“Blurring boundaries and disturbing dichotomies”

Dr. Denise Mitten

Denise Mitten, PhD, is professor of the graduate program of Sustainability Education and Adventure Education at Prescott College, Her work is informed by an interdisciplinary background that includes parent education, forest ecology, outdoor leadership, complementary and alternative therapies, and health and wellness. She studies the intersection of health and wellness while being in nature including spirituality, a sense of place, and the effect of outdoor activity participation on body image. Internationally recognized for her innovative scholarship in outdoor and environmental pedagogy, gender, and compassionate leadership, Denise has developed award-winning outdoor leadership programs for women, women felons, nuns in recovery, and socially and economically disadvantaged women and children.

See the 2022 Symposium page for registration and event information.

Plenary Panel April 10: Engaging Interconnectedness

Engaging Interconnectedness: Lessons from Sentient Beings/Ecosystems

  We are honored to present this panel of scholars whose presentations highlight the unique contributions of ecosystems, people, and other sentient beings to the dialogue of life on earth. In particular, their work teaches us how to listen well to the words and wisdom of others. This panel will be followed by an opportunity for panelists to respond to one another, as well as a Q & A with attendees.

 

Creation Story by Lisa Levart

 “From Techno-Capitalist Domination to Eco-Social Partnership,”  Asoka Bandarage

This presentation describes and compares the worldview of domination underlying the contemporary capitalist technological paradigm and the worldview of partnership that would underlie an alternative ecological paradigm. Drawing from both western academic disciplines and alternative philosophical approaches, especially Buddhism, I will explore the fundamental shift in consciousness, public policy and social action needed for ecological and social protection.

 

Cucuteni female figurines in circle

“Honoring Reciprocity: Collaborating with Indigenous Peoples on Traditional Ecological Knowledge,” Cristina Eisenberg

Dr. Eisenberg, who is of mixed Raramuri and Western Apache heritage, will share the basic tenets and ethical principles that enable effective, respectful intercultural collaboration with Indigenous peoples in Traditional Ecological Knowledge. Examples include harvesting medicinal plants, sharing stories, and learning about and participating in ceremonies. She will provide guidelines for best and most respectful ways of engaging with Indigenous peoples and learning from us.

 

Dancing Women, Greek Bronze, 800 BCE

“Blurring boundaries and disturbing dichotomies,”  Denise Mitten

Many fields of study operate in dualities helping humans retain a western heteropatriarchy worldview. This construct of dualities, including culture/nature, body/mind, human/animal, human/technology, and human/posthuman, causes and strengthens hierarchical ways of thinking and behaving. Language can help decolonize Eurocentric approaches to understanding human life including the phenomenon of being human as a part of the natural world.

 

Big Sky by Juliana Lightle

“Manuakepa – Reawaken Our Power to Connect,” Apela Colorado

Thirty years of research has unveiled a web of sacred sites that evince the mysteries of conception, birth, death, and rebirth, and reveal a lineage of Hawaiian and western women carrying the stories and caring for associated sacred sites. Manuakepa , Owl Woman and Chief of the White Springs (Woman’s) Temple, is a mythical, shapeshifting Owl who confronts invaders, frees village prisoners, and takes them into the underworld. The journey encoded in the Manuakepa sites prepares the villages to confront patriarchy and the spirit of death.

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Scholar Salon 34

Dreaming the Presence with Rabbi Jill Hammer. In sacred texts from the Bible to the Descent of Inanna, dreams have been a source of prophetic wisdom and profound inspiration. In contemporary times, our dreams may offer us surprising and moving images of the sacred feminine that come to inform and guide our lives. Rabbi Jill Hammer explores dreams of the sacred feminine, some from kabbalists of sixteenth century Sfat, and some from contemporary dreamers who are discovering the Presence in their nightly visions, in feminine forms

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Right Relations with Horses, Insects, Seals, Goddesses (2022 Symposium)

“Restoring Right Relationships with Sentient Beings”

2022 ASWM Symposium Panel

April 10th at 3PM Eastern Daylight Time

 

This panel addresses issues of crucial importance today: the survival of our ecosystems and wild animals, manifesting meaningful change, and reweaving the bonds among spirituality, nature, and human beings.

Seal pup, Back Bay National Wildlife Refuge

Brenda Peterson, “Silkies in Myth and on the Beach,” delves into silkies and seals in legend, song, story, and science. Her focus is on those stories that call us into a sustainable and more spiritual bond with these beings.

Wild horses, US Bureau of Land Management, 2014

Melissa Rosati,”The Horse: A Gallop through its Creation Myths and Agency as Visionary, Warrior, Savior, and Healer in Human Relationships,”  highlights the opportunities for the reawakening of divine feminine values through the equine archetypes of visionary, warrior, savior, and healer in myths surrounding Demeter/Ceres, Artemis/Diana,Athena/Minerva, and Epona/Rhiannon.

 

Windswept, JW Waterhouse (1903)

Andrea Fleckinger, “Frau Holle: In the Footsteps of the Great Goddess: Recalling Europe’s Indigenous Roots,” draws on Heide Goettner-Abendroth’s work on Matriarchal Landscape Mythology, examining how the ancient sacred meanings of landscapes can be decoded to restore the relationship between humans, spirituality, and nature.

honeybee

Judy Grahn, “Insects in Our Everyday Lives,” will present information on the importance of insects to the ecosystems of the earth, and tell some anecdotes about their intelligence and interactions with each other and with humans.

See the 2022 Symposium page for event information.

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Relating to Animals, Plants, and the Divine (Symposium 2022)

“Other Ways of Knowing and Relating: Animal-Plant-Divine” 

2022 ASWM Symposium Panel

Sunday, April 10th, 2022 at 3:00 PM Eastern Daylight Time 

This panel explores relationships at various levels: the non-dual relationship between animals and divinity, the interconnections between humans and the landscape, the fluid relationship (that is possible) between humans, the divine, and the animal and plant worlds when the natural world is not objectified, and ancient relationships between the human and plant world, and how they can be re-established in the present day.

Yogini Vrishanana, 10th century, National Museum Delhi

Monica Mody “When Yoginis Appear with Animals: Animistic Relational Elements and the Non-dual Matrix,” weaves together scholarly commentary and original poetry to wonder at some of the likely dimensions of the relationship between animal and Yogini.

Emma Dymock, “The Living Cauldron: Transformative Landscapes in Celtic Mythology” explores the interconnected relationship between humans and the living landscape through the lens of Celtic mythology, with specific focus on the story of the Goddess Cerridwen.

Nereides, Boston Museum of Fine Arts

Barbara Crescimanno, “Siciliian Nymphs. Animal, Human, Divine Creatures”  traces the survival of Nymphs–Goddesses who can appear as sacred trees, medicinal gardens, caves and sacred waters as well as herbalists, beekeepers, and midwives in the still living cultural traditions of Sicily.

photo by Julien McRoberts, 2020

Reagan Wytsalucy, “The Land Still Bears Fruit: Restoring the Navajo Peach through Strengthened Community Traditions” recounts her journey to return an important traditional food source, and its cultural story, to her people’s land in the Four Corners region of the Southwest.

See 2022 Symposium page for registration and event information.

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