What’s the Buzz about “Vibrant Voices”?

Vibrant Voices: Women, Myth, and the Arts

Volume II of Proceedings of the Association for the Study of Women and Mythology, edited by Sid Reger and Marna Hauk

“Vibrant Voices is an essential guide and touchstone for all future work on women and mythology.”
–Miranda Shaw, author of Passionate Enlightenment

 

We proudly launch this beautiful proceedings volume on March 17, 2018 at our ASWM Conference.  At least 15 of our contributors will be on hand, and book signings will be happening at the Marketplace from4 to 8pm. There is a special introductory price for those attending the conference.

With over 30 contributors, this full-color book explores the many facets of women’s arts as they illuminate sacred stories from many traditions. In her Foreword, Judy Grahn says,

These essays add to our sensual experiences as well as to our ever-expanding knowledge base. The invitational qualities and broad diversity of origin and expression of the selections in this volume are balanced by histories of the colonization that the foremothers and preservers of indigenous religions and community have had to endure.

 Our goals in creating this book were to honor artist-scholars’ work and to inspire further explorations of women and the arts. We include visual arts, poetry, and scholarship from over 30 contributors who have presented at ASWM events. In her Afterword, Cristina Biaggi speaks to this intention:

This amazing small gem of an anthology – full of wisdom and new ways of seeing and inspiration – is a welcome addition to our growing Goddess library that serves to nourish and inspire us and beckons us toward a new world filled with hope and light.

Here what other goddess scholars are saying about Vibrant Voices:

 

“A stunning testimony to the importance of the path-breaking, boundary-crossing work of the Association for the Study of Women and Mythology.”

–Carol P. Christ, author of Goddess and God in the World and A Serpentine Path  

 

“So many forces in our hypermodern culture have denied the ancient triad of women, art, and the sacred that we can barely grasp all that has been lost to us. Vibrant Voices makes an insightful and deeply beautiful contribution to the recovery, as well as inspiration for creative new directions.”

— Charlene Spretnak, author of The Spiritual Dynamic in Modern Art, 1800 to the Present

 

 “This stunning volume reveals and celebrates the female divine through artistry, poesy, and superb scholarship.  The thorough integration of historical, experiential, and visionary voices is a pivotal achievement. Vibrant Voices is an essential guide and touchstone for all future work on women and mythology.”

~Miranda Shaw, author of Passionate Enlightenment: Women in Tantric Buddhism and Buddhist Goddesses of India

 

“This collection of wisdom of women’s spirituality scholarship is indispensable for understanding the possibilities today in the midst of converging environmental, political, gender, and spiritual crises – – and to birthing a new civilization where nobody is  ‘othered;’  everybody creates a society of love and justice.”  

-Lucia Chiavola Birnbaum, author of Dark Mother: African Origins and Godmothers

Vibrant Voices will be for sale for a special introductory price at our conference in Las Vegas. It will also be available at Goddess Ink and on Amazon.

“Vibrant Voices” Anthology Released

Announcing the release:  Vibrant Voices: Women, Myth, and the Arts

Volume II, Proceedings of the Association for the Study of Women and Mythology

With over 30 contributors, this full-color book explores the many facets of women’s arts as they illuminate sacred stories from many traditions. In her Foreword, Judy Grahn says,

These essays add to our sensual experiences as well as to our ever-expanding knowledge base. The invitational qualities and broad diversity of origin and expression of the selections in this volume are balanced by histories of the colonization that the foremothers and preservers of indigenous religions and community have had to endure.

Purchase Vibrant Voices at  Amazon

Poet Annie Finch to Present Earth Healing Ritual at Conference

Ritual on Climate Change and Earth Abuse

This interactive ritual, suitable for either a workshop or presentation, will create a sacred space in which participants may access, express, and transform our fear, rage, grief, and mourning over the patriarchal abuse of Mother Earth. We will create a circle of Goddesses of Earth — Asase Yaa, Corn Maiden, Danu, Demeter, Gaia, Mago, Ostara, and Pacha Mama — to witness and contain catharsis and transformation. we will focus on accessing and expressing our suppressed emotions about earth abuse.  In the final part of the ritual, we will raise further energy and the group will create and participate in a performative catharsis of chanting and circling.  The ritual will close with an opportunity for participants to write and/or chant an intention and resolution for collective and/or individual action to move forward in support of Earth and her healing.

Annie Finch is a poet, writer, speaker, performer, and witch. Her eighteen books include Eve, Calendars, A Poet’s CraftSpells, and Among the Goddesses: An Epic Libretto in Seven Dreams, which received ASWM’s 2010 Sarasvati Award. A graduate of Yale with a Stanford Ph.D, Annie currently teaches for the low-residency M.F.A. program in creative writing at St. Francis College and offers inspirational talks, rituals, and workshops on language and spirit.

Two Presentation Grant Winners: Beverly Little Thunder and Lushanya Echeverria

This powerful mother-daughter team presents on human rights and social justice.  Listening to her own ancestors and following her visions in spite of opposition, Beverly Little Thunder holds ceremonial space in Vermont. She teaches and counsels those who hold their own visions and is especially active in supporting the next generations while they move into their places of leadership. Presenting with her daughter Lushanya she aims to inspire hope, courage, and confidence in those who will one day be our leadership. Her recent memoir, One Bead at a Time,  will be available for sale at the conference.

Beverly Little Thunder & Lushanya Echeverria, “Womyn’s Sundance: Two Spirit Indigenous Ceremonial Community”

‘We are all related’ is the belief that Lakota people live by. Womyn are the bearers of that life. Before documented history the Wimmin were the ones to decide how the tribe functioned. Today it is still the role Wimmin are playing, but now patriarchal social systems create opposition to those roles by not only men but by many females also. Our best shot at stopping that mindset is through teaching our daughters that we are not the weaker of the species. This presentation emphasizes the strengths of wimmen in fighting for social justice for all.

Lushanya Echeverria, “Recognizing Intergenerational Trauma from American Indian Boarding Schools”

The trauma from emotional and physical abuse inflicted on Baby Boomers, attending American Indian Boarding Schools, has a huge impact on Millennials as their parents process trust issues and negative perceptions of educational institutions passed down from relatives. 

Beverly Little Thunder is a Two-Spirit mother, grandmother, great-grandmother, and lifelong activist. She was involved in the American Indian Movement at its inception, is a founding member of the Two-Spirit Gathering movement, and continues to fight for human rights and racial and social justice. As an enrolled tribal member, Beverly was on the front lines Standing Rock’s “Mni Wiconi” Water Protector Movement, and Kunsi Keya became the fiscal sponsor of Two Spirit Nation during that time. Beverly is also a published author of the memoir, One Bead at a Time and a chapter in Two Spirit People (1995). Beverly has also shared her wisdom in presentations at Modern Matriarchal Studies Day (2016) and at women’s gatherings across the country.

Lushanya Echeverria, Master of Art in Education,  is a professional educator specializing in Emotional Wellness and Behavior Modification in inner-city Phoenix.  Drawing from her upbringing within her Lakota Sioux heritage, Lushanya works with Native American students and families to build connections between traditional home practices and public education through community circles, parenting classes, curriculum, truancy intervention and Conflict Mediation. Spiritual Leader of the Lakota Women’s Sundance (as trained and guided by her mother), Lushanya shares traditional teachings of her people to help women, men, and children have a sense of connection between themselves and Mother Earth.  Lushanya is a trained ShadowWork facilitator, Conflict Mediation trainer, and enjoys spending her free time singing with her local Women’s Choir and time with her 18 nieces and nephews.