Announcing Scholar Salon 79: Register for November 21

“Truth, Lies and Possibilities: Writing the Story of Buddha’s Wife”

with Barbara McHugh

Thursday,  November 21, 2024 at 3 PM Eastern Time  

REGISTER HERE

Siddhartha leaves Yasodhara and Rahula

Recently, especially since the pandemic, many fiction writers have been soul-searching: In these times, why write made-up stories? Don’t we have enough of them already? Perhaps only narratives of actual people in real situations are important for our sense of reality. In this presentation, Barbara McHugh talks about what is unique to stories as an art form and why we need to keep making them up. Using her novel, Bride of the Buddha, and other examples, along with what she’s learned in countless fiction-writing workshops, she shows how stories—from folk tales told by grannies to modern narratives created by so-called solitary geniuses—embody our values and thereby enlarge our felt sense of who we are and what our relationship is to the
universe. She also discusses the necessity of story variants to keep us from getting trapped in any single narrative, including the ones we invent to make sense of our lives.

Bride of the Buddha began as a response to the refusal of many of the author’s women friends to bother with Buddhism at all, because its founder had abandoned his wife and child. She wanted to explore the story from the point of view of the deserted wife in a way that, even if the Buddha isn’t exonerated, the practice of Buddhism is. The more research she did, and the more she wrote, the more she felt compelled to make a radical change to the story. She ended up having the Buddha’s wife disguise herself as a man in order to join her former husband’s all-male monastic community. That got the author into trouble, but it also convinced her of the importance of story-making in all its forms.

Barbara McHugh

Barbara McHugh is a poet and novelist with an interdisciplinary PhD from UC Berkeley and the Graduate Theological Union. To support herself as a student, she did everything from assembly line jobs to door-to-door sales and social work in all kinds of neighborhoods. She also has worked as a book doctor/writing coach and taught graduate courses on subjects such as the relationship between evil and the attempts to annihilate it. Her novel Bride of the Buddha (Monkfish Books, 2021) won awards for literary and general fiction. Her poems have appeared in the Berkeley Poetry Review, The Magnolia Review, Steam Ticket, Brushfire, Straight Forward Poetry, and others. She enjoys hiking, traveling, and chasing total eclipses of the sun.

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Save the date and watch for details :

Scholar Salon #80, January 7 2025 at 3:00 PM Eastern Time, 

with Vicki Noble

Benefit of Membership - ASWM

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

 

Announcing Scholar Salon 78: Register for November 7

“Goddesses of Healing of Ancient Greece”

with Eftyhia Leontidou

Thursday,  November 7, 2024 at 12 NOON Eastern Time  

REGISTER HERE

Hygeia, Athenian red-figure hydria, c5th B.C.E.

Anyone who has visited Greece would probably be familiar with the most common Greek expression, «γεια σου», meaning “to your health!” This phrase is used as a greeting, as a wish, as a blessing, or as a toast when raising glasses. «Γεια» or -more correctly- «υγεία», meaning health, is personified by the ancient Greek Goddess Hygieia; and is the root of many words used in different languages in association with health, cleanliness and sanitation, e.g. hygiene. Hygieia is the most well-known ancient Greek Goddess of healing, but there are quite a few more, e.g. her four sisters, daughters of the god of medicine Asclepius (Panacea, Iaso, Aceso and Aegle). Other healing Goddesses are exclusively associated with birthing/childbirth, e.g. Eileithyia, or with decent and painless death, e.g. Artemis.  I will unfold their stories and their symbols, particularly the snake, whose venom can kill or heal. These Goddesses of medicine promote health on the physical, emotional and spiritual plane; but emphasis will also be placed on the healing needed by our relationships, our societies, and our planet, Mother Earth, all of them wounded by millennia of patriarchy. 

Since the earliest matriarchal human societies of prehistory, healing has been a women’s art. Nowadays, although female healers outnumber their male colleagues, they still fight to earn their rightful acknowledgement in the health system. But the medicine women of our times also have to be warriors, as they fight for women’s rights; against the trauma of violence against women; for the healing of the planet and against destructive acts and practices. In this war they are guided by the archetype of the Goddess Athena, who was worshipped as healer and warrior, among her other qualities.

Dr. Eftyhia Leontidou

Dr. Eftyhia Leontidou MD, is a Greek Obstetrician- gynecologist, who has spent all her life healing and empowering women, as a health professional, as an author and as a feminist activist. A lover of music, archaeology, mythology, travel, photography, and Tai chi, and a member of the Women’s Global Network for Reproductive Rights, she owns a well- informed archive of various kinds of documents on women’s issues. Eftyhia has written and translated many articles on women’s rights and health issues for medical and feminist magazines in Greece and abroad. She has also coedited and contributed as an author, translator and photographer in many collective women’s books. Her activities include lectures, seminars and workshops for doctors, medical students, women’s groups as well as battered, unemployed, immigrant and socially excluded women, in collaboration with women’s and cultural organizations, groups, schools, parents’ unions, local authorities, and the European Union; in addition she has taken part in training programs for the police on violence against women.

For more than 50 years she has been active in the autonomous women’s movement being a member of self-examination, feminist activist and feminist spirituality groups in Athens. The last two years, 2023 and 2024, she contributed to the Glastonbury Goddess Conference as a presenter. Her latest project, called Feminist Gynecology, consists so far of three books: 1) Goddess in Action – Childbirth, 2) Female Sexuality – From Flesh to Spirit, and 3) Female body – A Mystical tour.

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Scholar Salon #79 November 21 at 3:00 PM Eastern Time

Truth, Lies and Possibilities: Writing about Buddha’s Wife 

with Barbara HcHugh

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Save the date and watch for details :

Scholar Salon #80, January 7 2025 at 3:00 PM Eastern Time, 

with Vicki Noble

Benefit of Membership - ASWM

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

 

Scholar Salon 75

ASWM Scholar Salon with Dr. Vivien Monroe, "Decoding Delphi: Reconstructing the Technology of Divination," asks: What were the spiritual technologies used at  the Delphic Oracle? How did the Greeks understand that the Oracle worked, and  what role, if any, did gender play in the successful operation of the oracle?

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Scholar Salon 77

ASWM Scholar Salon with photographer Maria Haas, "Exploring Matriarchal Societies: Encounters and Insights from Around the World," which takes the audience on a captivating journey through the matriarchal cultures she has visited and documented.

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Announcing Scholar Salon 77: Register for October 10

“Exploring Matriarchal Societies: Encounters and Insights from Around the World”

with Maria Haas

Thursday,  October 10, 2024 at 12 NOON Eastern Time  

REGISTER HERE

Matriarchs by Maria Haas

In her lecture, “Exploring Matriarchal Societies: Encounters and Insights from Around the World,” Maria Haas takes the audience on a captivating journey through the matriarchal cultures she has visited and documented. She shares her personal experiences and encounters with the Minangkabau in Indonesia, the Khasi in India, the Mosuo in China, and other matriarchal societies.

Maria Haas highlights the similarities and diffrences between these cultures, drawing out the unique characteristics of each society. She delves into the key parameters that define matriarchal cultures, from social organization and the role of women to cultural and spiritual aspects. The lecture offers a unique insight into the diversity and distinctive structures of these extraordinary communities.

Maria Haas

Maria Haas is a renowned photographer based in Klosterneuburg near Vienna, Austria. After graduating from the College of Photography at the Higher Graphic Teaching and Research Institute in Vienna in 1990, she founded her own photography studio, initially focusing on travel and reportage photography. In 1996, her work took her to New York, where she attended workshops at the International Center of Photography and exhibited her works in cities such as New York, Vienna, Florence, and Tampere. Over the years, Maria Haas’ interest shifted towards documenting societies that do not conform to Western norms, with a particular fascination for matriarchal cultures. She has studied and photographed these unique societies across the globe, producing acclaimed photo books like MATRIARCHS (2020) and MATRIARCHS 2 (2022), which explore the roles and significance of women in these communities. Her recent projects include documenting women affected by female genital mutilation (FGM) in Kenya and photographing shamans in Peru.

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Save the Dates for future Salons:

 Thursday, October 24, 2024 at 3 PM Eastern Time (Rescheduled) 

Feasting on a Hekate Supper at the Crossroads” with Kay Turner

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Thursday, November 7, 2024 at 12 NOON Eastern Time

“Healing Goddesses of Greece” with Eftyhia Leontidou

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Thursday, November 21, 2024 at 3 PM Eastern Time

“Truth, Lies and Possibilities: Writing about Buddha’s Wife” with Barbara McHugh

Benefit of Membership - ASWM

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