Scholar Salon 90

Scholar Salon #90: In this presentation Dr. Kathryn Henderson explores the foundational myths of the antlered Deer Mother: "Deer Mother’s message is one of keeping balance, of reverence for the earth’s life-giving nurturance, death and rebirth. "

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Announcing Scholar Salon 92: Register for October 30

“At the Heart: Honoring Palaeolithic Matrifocal Human-Animal Connection”

with Susan Moulton

Thursday,  October 30, 2025 at 3:00 PM Eastern Time  

REGISTER HERE

Pech-Merle spotted horses, c. 25,000 BCE

Influenced by First Nation Indigenous concepts, Nature and animal behavior, this research expands the foundational idea of “personhood” to include all forms of life, especially the behavior and central role of the “sacred female/mother” in diverse species, including Paleolithic Hominins, and the role of the wise, older “lead” females in free-ranging mammalian herds and plant communities as key to the early understanding of human social structure and expression. To understand the complexity of the remote past we must consider the experience of the first Hominins who lived in synchrony with all sentient aspects of their natural environment, including animals and plants.

Dun horse, Lascaux Cave, c. 20,000 BCE

Few scholars have demonstrated an expanded awareness of the interconnectedness of life within Nature or the impact of the sentience and behavior of animals on the earliest human cultures, or how the diversity of life within ecosystems has functioned to influence human beliefs, symbols, stories, mythic systems and other forms of expression. This study challenges truncated archaeological methodologies of inherited patriarchal Eurocentric overviews and biases with their Cartesian opposition between Nature and human “civilization,” presuming humans have culture whereas non-human life forms do not.

 

Susan Moulton and friends

Susan Moulton  has lived with animals from an early age and began riding horses at the age of three. For the past 52 years she has lived in rural Sonoma County, California on a small farm with an array of rescued animals. Susan has learned a lot from each species, using what she has learned from them to raise her two sons. To support her lifestyle, Susan was a university professor (Art/Art History) for 44 years, teaching over one hundred courses, and chairing the Art and Art History Department, and the University Faculty. She received her Ph.D. from Stanford University. Susan has been the recipient of numerous awards including a Carnegie Foundation Research Grant. She is the co-founder, with Joan Marler, of the International Institute of Archaeomythology. Susan has sponsored many M.A. students and PhDs, and has been blessed to share her ideas in publications and conferences globally, including numerous experiences with Indigenous Peoples in the US and abroad. Currently she is finishing a book that combines everything she loves: animals, art history, archaeology, and ecology, which is the subject of her Salon.

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Upcoming Scholar Salon (3pm Eastern Time):

October 30, 2025:  From the Heart: the Human Animal Connection with Susan Moulton

Benefit of Membership - ASWM

This Salon recording will also be available to members when processed after the event. 

 

Scholar Salon 89 (Recording now available)

Scholar Salon #89: In this presentation Dr. Miriam Robbins Dexter "excavates the history and posits the prehistory of the Great Goddess Tanit" through Phoenecian, Greek, Minoan and Egyptian myths of the functions of Great Goddesses.

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Scholar Salon 88

Scholar Salon #88: In this presentation Mexican scholar Veronica Iglesias explores the stories of Tlacuache the opossum as a guardian of human beings, and its symbolism within the Mesoamerican worldview.

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Announcing Volume 4 of ASWM Proceedings: “Maternal Thinking”

MATERNAL THINKING:  Gifts, Mothers’ Bodies, and Earth

Maternal Thinking: Gifts, Mothers’ Bodies, and Earth, the fourth book of proceedings of conferences held by the Association of the Study of Women and Mythology (ASWM), is an instructional guide to saving ourselves and our planet. Many pre-historic, and even contemporary cultures, especially Indigenous communities, feature “Maternal Thinking.” Such cultures perceive that societies are successful when they center qualities associated with mothering: care, nurturance, cooperation, and meeting everyone’s basic needs while respecting Earth and reciprocating nature’s generosity..

The Association for the Study of Women and Mythology is dedicated to presenting the stories and values of cultures that honor our mother the earth and life-giving relationships of reciprocity and gift giving among all who dwell here. Our Proceedings Volume 4 draws on “maternal thinking”, a feminist perspective that reflects on  mothering as a model for and a model of caring relations that involve gift giving and reciprocity.  This expansive conception of mothering is not limited to biological mothers.  Several contributions by indigenous women share stories honoring care-giving practices taught to humans by other than humans, including the earth, elemental forces of nature, and various animals and other living creatures. Other chapters bring new understandings of mothering relations in myths and goddess stories from Europe as well as Kurdish culture, ancient Jewish writings, and Buddhism.  Maternal thinking enriches our understanding of the past and feeds a vision of the future in which all life is respected and preserved.  

Purchase Maternal Thinking at  Amazon