Saturday, January 26, 2019

Earth Speak: Envisioning a Conversant World





I was looking forward to presenting this at the Association for Women and Mythology Conference in New Mexico, but unfortunately I have had to cancel because of illness.  But I just felt like posting it again anyway................brings back the revelations of that wonderful trip!

Earth-speak:

Envisioning a Conversant World

By Lauren Raine MFA


""Speak to the Earth and it shall teach thee"

Job 12:8

In 2018 I attended a conference on sacred sites and dowsing at Pewsey, in Southern England, called the Gate Keepers Conference (1), an annual conference of dowsers, mythologists, and Earth mysteries researchers who have been investigating sacred sites throughout the United Kingdom, as well as intentional pilgrimage to them, for many years.  I also undertook my visit as a personal pilgrimage, visiting in the course of my time in the U.K. Avebury, Silbury Hill, Glastonbury, Arbor Low, and other sites.

 My introduction to this adventure took some fortitude.   After a 15-hour flight from Los Angeles, I waited in line 2 hours in Customs, then made my way to Paddington Station in London, then to Swindon by train, and finally to Avebury by bus.  By the time I stepped off the bus, I was, perhaps, in an altered state of consciousness from utter exhaustion.  I stepped from the bus to see, perfectly aligned with my sight, rising from the morning’s mist, the great prehistoric monument of Silbury Hill, the mysterious Omphalos of an ancient world. 

When I saw Silbury through the mist, what opened before me was a vision of a time when the entire landscape was the sacred body of the deity, a cyclical mythos of an animated Earth that ensouled and enlivened and enstoried every hill, spring, river and forest within a cosmology of conversant belonging.  I will never forget that moment of revelation.

Situated just south of Avebury, Silbury Hill is Europe's tallest prehistoric structure.   Michael Dames, in his book THE SILBURY TREASURE (2) demonstrates persuasively that Silbury, like other "Neolithic Harvest Hills" associated with nearby henges and standing stones, literally represented the pregnant belly of the Great Mother, and was associated with a certain time of the agricultural year, in particular, the harvest of July/August. 

Silbury Hill is part of the great Avebury ceremonial complex, and has been excavated over the centuries, never once finding the “great chieftain’s treasure” which, Dames points out, it was assumed “must” be there.  We now know, at last, that its interior does not hold gold or the bones of a mythic hero king and his unfortunate slaves.  Rather, it simply holds grains, turf, and animal bones, with no evidence of human burial at its core.  Silbury is also surrounded by a henge or moat, once considerably deeper than it now is, and which would have been full of water, at least at certain times of the year.Dames points out that this henge actually forms the shape of a squatting or birthing woman in profile.     He likens the "Goddess form" of the henge to similar ubiquitous Goddess sculptures and sites associated with Cornwall, Ireland, Scotland, the Orkney Islands, the Hebrides, the Isle of Man, Brittany.........as far as the mysterious Temples of Malta, or the barely excavated stone circles of Gobekli Tepe in Turkey.

Why has this interpretation of Silbury never been seen before?  Because, Dames points out, to do so one must make a kind of paradigm shift into an alternate view of his-story.  “Silbury “Michael Dames writes,

“Conveys a philosophy which is of exceptional relevance to the modern world.  Silbury has been reduced to an enigma because of the attempt to impress upon it concepts such as kingship, personal property, and individual male glory. Who put “King Sil” into Silbury?  We did, because we wanted him there - a superman chieftain with a super treasure and hundreds of slaves, so vain, so aggressive, so acquisitive, so preoccupied with eternal fame, that he could provide us with a monumental tomb and treasure.  All treasure finding attempts have failed because the builders belonged to a society for which such concepts had little importance, or even meaning.  And yet, since their compelling priorities are not entirely absent from our values, we can appreciate something of what the original Silsbury treasure was, especially since the future of our own civilization may give us urgency and humility to tender our investigation.” (3)

 

When I walked the Avebury complex, I experienced the intensification of life force vitality I have come to recognize in places of numinosity and telluric force.  There is no doubt in my mind (or body mind) that these sites marked places of intrinsic geomantic power, and that the placement of stones also served to intensify or channel the animating Earth energies present.   Sacred landscapes also augment their healing or consciousness elevating properties through the interaction of generations of people with the "spirit of the land” through what researchers such as Paul Deveraux (4) have termed "geomantic reciprocity".

 Geomantic reciprocity occurs as human beings bring intentionality and focus to a particular place, making it a holy or sacred place.  This  communion with place becomes more active as place itself accrues story or mythic power  in the memory of the people, and in the memory of the land.   Sacred places have both an innate and a developed capacity to bring about altered states of consciousness, especially if people come prepared within the open, liminal state of pilgrimage or ceremony.  And myth   is the language spoken to engage the numinous presence.

I also went to Glastonbury in Somerset as part of my journey to visit the famous Chalice Well.  Glastonbury is Avalon - the source of the Arthurian legends, the land of Merlin, Arthur and the Lady of the Lake.  Once the hill now called the Tor was surrounded by a lake.  During the Middle Ages Glastonbury was the home of the great Gothic Cathedral of Glastonbury and its community of monks, a place of universal pilgrimage.  The Cathedral was destroyed by Henry the VIII, and the Abbot executed, after the Abbot refused to leave the Catholic church.

Dowsers Caroline Hoare and Gary Biltcliffe (5) write of the “crossing of the Michael and Mary lines” at the Tor, a prominent point of interest to those investigating Earth energies.  The Tor also features a tower, once part of the destroyed Abbey, visible from miles away, that stands atop the famous hill.  They also speak of the more mutable “Dragon lines” of serpentine force that weave throughout this highly energized area.  Underground springs originate in the area of the Tor, springs that have been renowned for their healing powers since long before the advent of Christianity.   Now called the "Red Spring" and the "White Spring”, where these springs emerge, at an underground chamber and at the Chalice Well Garden, are still revered by pilgrims who come to them from around the world.   The red color found at the Chalice Well is from iron oxide deposited by the spring.  The White Spring deposits calcium, leaving a white residue.

 The Avalonian springs are famous as part of the ancient mythic landscape of Avalon…………. but in truth, there are hundreds if not thousands of once revered historical and prehistoric wells and springs throughout the UK, many of them still named for St. Brigit, the ancient Goddess of the Isles of Britannia.  The Chalice Garden, for me, is infused with presence, with the Goddess local  devotees call the Lady of Avalon. She is the Genus Loci of Avalon, what the Romans called Numina. (6)


The garden of the Chalice Well looked different, as the last time I had visited had been high summer.  It was deserted, and I was able to sit before the Well in meditation alone.   I took water from the springs to bring home, and then walked around.  What popped into my mind,  as if I heard it spoken, was odd - the words "Covenant Garden". When one is on a Pilgrimage, it is important to pay attention to whatever occurs, internally or externally.   As I walked among winters sleeping apple trees and bright red holly berries, I wondered:  what could "covenant garden" mean, and why had I thought of it? 

I remembered the name of the English Goddess Coventina.  According to Wikipedia,

Coventina was a Romano-British goddess of wells and springs. She is known from multiple inscriptions found at a site in Northumberland County, an area surrounding a wellspring near Carrawburgh on Hadrian’s Wall. (7)


A Triple Goddess of wells and springs was certainly appropriate for the Chalice Springs  of Glastonbury.  Interestingly,  the word Covenant, like "coven", "convening",  etc.  refers to a gathering of people to reach a harmonious agreement, which can include an agreement that is holy in some way.   

Such musings then led me to imagine  the famous  "Ark of the Covenant", which was said to hold writings and objects of Biblical veneration, as well as containing  "God's sustenance for man" which was called Manna.   Manna was the food, variously described as different substances or grains, which was provided by God to feed the people.  "Manna" has also come to mean a kind of inherent numinous power that may be found in a place or an object.

 The Ark of the Covenant, described in the Book of Exoduswas a gold-covered wooden chest containing the stone tablets of the Ten Commandments.  It also was supposed to contain “a golden jar holding manna, and Aaron's rod, which budded". (8)

Interesting:  holy food and a budding rod or tree.  The Garden is indeed a "harmonious agreement" between earthly beings of all kinds.  And "Manna" is the food provided by the Garden, which I view as the sustaining power of nature.  Aaron’s  "rod that blooms “could also be seen, from the viewpoint of a feminist mythologist like myself,  as a symbol originally belonging to the ancient Hebrew and Middle Eastern  Goddess Asherah, who was often  represented as a tree.  In the days of the Old Testament, She was an important deity, and was represented as a rod, or "Asherah pole”. (9)  The practice of carrying "Asherah poles" was apparently fairly common in the early days of the Semite tribes, although the Patriarchs later eliminated this custom, along with the Goddess, as the Hebrew deity became exclusively male. 

I reflected that a Garden represents a "Covenant” between human, animal, plant, soil, air, rain, water.......A successful garden is a harmonious Ecosystem in balance with all of its components.  A garden thrives through a network of inter-dependant relationships.  Trees communicate with each other through a vast underground weaving of roots and fungi.  The bees and other pollinators bring new life; the worms, microorganisms and other insects assist in the decay process.  And the birds assist in distributing seed as well.  Not to mention humans that may plant, sow, admire, and occasionally eat the stray apple or strawberry as well. 

 It could be said that a Garden is a "Covenant" achieved by many beings to reach a divine agreement.  THE GARDEN OF THE COVENANT.

As I was leaving the Chalice Garden, I saw a tiny metallic heart on the ground.  I was going to take it, but then it occurred to me that perhaps someone left it as a token or as an offering, and it wasn't right for me to take it.  I put it back on the ground and took a picture.  I was amazed to see that the camera showed light surrounding the little shape in the photo!  So I took two more, and they came out the same.   A Green Heart ……… 


Perhaps the Earth is Speaking to us all the time, we’ve just forgotten how to listen.  I believe there are ways to renew that conversation, to attune we once again to the voice of place, and hence, to see Place once again as sacred.  How might we live, how might we act, if we saw the world with such a vision, as both Covenant and Conversation?

"To the native Irish, the literal representation of the country was less important than its poetic dimension.  In traditional bardic culture, every place had its legend and its own identity.... what endured was an ongoing conversation with the mythic landscape."

R. F. Foster (10)

In so many areas of the UK the 21st Century can seem like just another layer atop a pentimento of a much older landscape, one that proceeds our short view of history.   Of course, this is true everywhere, but it seems so much in evidence there.  That "pentimento" visible just below the surface is circular, serpentine, and full of standing stones, henges, magic wells, and ley lines.   What, as theologians and "geologians" for the future, might we recover, re-learn and re-invent from it?

With the evolution of monotheism and patriarchal religions that increasingly removed divinity from both nature and the body, and in the past century the rapid rise of industrialization, we have increasingly looked at the world from a "users" point of view.   Places with their unique qualities and beauties become "resources" instead of living lands.  Renunciate religions have also served to de-sacralize earthly experience, further complicating our crisis.   Yet every early culture has insisted that nature is full of intelligence and intelligences that inform, bless, heal, and communicate, often through the multi-dimensional language of myth and altered states of consciousness.   

Contemporary Gaia Theory, developed by James Lovelock and Lynn Margulis (10), proposes that the Earth is a living, self-regulating organism, responsive and evolving.  If one is sympathetic to Gaia Theory, and the innate interactive intelligence of ecosystems, it follows that everything living is responsive and conversant in some way, in ways both visible and invisible.  I believe we need to learn to "speak with the Earth" again, not in some abstract way, but intimately, beneath our well-rooted feet, in our creative hands entwined and webbed among a great planetary collaboration. The "Covenant" of the Garden.  

How do we regain our niche in that great “Covenant”?   One answer is through “re-mything” culture.  Myth is, and always has been, a way for human beings to become intimate with what is ultimately vast, deep, and mysterious. Our experience changes when Place becomes "you" or "Thou" instead of "it".    We can renew our conversation, and change our paradigm, by looking back as well as forward, to a time when "nature" was about relationship with the land.  Relationship  in which cultures, individuals and religions were profoundly embedded as both story and as living metaphor.   And some places were places of special power, places of pilgrimage.


References and Notes:

1.  The Gatekeeper Trust,  Dreaming the Land – Working with the Consciousness of Nature", Annual Conference 2018,  Pewsey, Wiltshire, UK https://gatekeeper.org.uk/2018/05/dreaming-the-land-annual-conference-2018/

2.  Dames, Michael:  The Silbury Treasure:  The Great Goddess Rediscovered, 1976, Thames and Hudson, London

3.  Dames, Michael:  The Silbury Treasure:  The Great Goddess Rediscovered, 1976, Thames and Hudson, London, Page 76

4.  Deveraux, Paul Earthmind: Communicating with the Living World of Gaia,Paul Devereux; John Steele; David Kubrin, 1992, Inner Traditions, Vermont 

5.  Biltclilffe, Gary and Hoare, Caroline:  The Power of Centre, 2018, Sacred Lands Publishing, Dorset, UK 

6.  Cambridge English Dictionary (2019): 

   numen / (ˈnjuːmɛn) /, noun plural -mina (-mɪnə)             (An ancient Roman religion) a deity or spirit presiding over a place,             guiding principle, force, or spirit

7. Wikipedia the Free Encyclopedia; “Coventina”: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coventina

8. Wikipedia the Free Encyclopedia; “The Ark of the Covenant”: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ark_of_the_Covenant

9. An Asherah pole was a sacred pole (or sometimes a tree) that was used in the worship of the Goddess Asherah. The Asherah pole was often mentioned in the Old Testament as one of the ways the Israelites sinned against their God by worshipping other gods.  The "Asherah pole" was mentioned in the Judeo/Christian Bible a number of times, including Exodus 34:13 (NIV): "Break down their altars, smash their sacred stones and cut down their Asherah poles." The Israelites were commanded to destroy any Asherah pole they found - however, it seems that the custom, as well as the worship of Asherah, was absorbed and retained nevertheless by Israelites for a considerable time.  For more:  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Asherah_pole

10.   Foster, Roy F., Modern Ireland:  1600 - 1972, 1990, Penguin Books, N.Y

11.  Lovelock, James with Margulis, Lynn: 

Gaia: A New Look at Life on Earth, 1979, Oxford University Press, Oxford, England.




Wednesday, January 23, 2019

15th Annual Conference on Current Pagan Studies in Claremont, CA


This weekend (January 26 and 27, 2019) I will be at the Conference on Pagan Studies at Claremont Colleges, in Claremont, California. It's the 15th year for the Conference, and as always, I look greatly forward to it! I'll be sharing a paper called "Earth Speak: Envisioning a Conversant World". The Conference is friendly, fascinating, and affordable - if you're in the area, come join us!
Picture

Sunday, January 20, 2019

Remembering Mary Oliver


I was so saddened to learn of the death of poet Mary Oliver, who, like Ursula Leguin, has been a lifelong mentor and inspiration.  I felt like sharing again this poem of hers, which says something about her to me.  Because she was, indeed, a Light to the world.

The Buddha’s Last Instruction


“Make of yourself a light,” 
said the Buddha,
before he died.

I think of this every morning
as the east begins
to tear off its many clouds
of darkness, to send up the first
signal – a white fan
streaked with pink and violet,
even green.

An old man, he lay down
between two sala trees,
and he might have said anything,
knowing it was his final hour.

The light burns upward,
it thickens and settles over the fields.
Around him, the villagers gathered
and stretched forward to listen.
Even before the sun itself
hangs, disattached, in the blue air,
I am touched everywhere
by its ocean of yellow waves.

No doubt he thought of everything
that had happened in his difficult life.

And then I feel the sun itself
as it blazes over the hills,
like a million flowers on fire –
clearly I’m not needed,
yet I feel myself turning
into something
of inexplicable value.

Slowly, beneath the branches,
he raised his head.
He looked into the faces of that frightened crowd.

Sunday, January 6, 2019

Exhibit at Clay Co-op January 11th


I'm very pleased to have a chance to share some of the work I did this past summer, collectively called "Our Lady of the Shards".    I will also be reading from "Aphrodite in Brooklyn and Other Mythic Voices", my recent collection of poetry.  Welcome all who happen to be in the Tucson Area!  

​"Our Lady" lies among the broken shards, debris  and resurfacing mythos of the past.  She has been buried by time, history,  war, and  often the co-option of what was once sacred.  She is the Black Madonna:  the dark, generative Mother  Earth found in the presence of sacred springs and cave, or like Our Lady of the Desert Spring, She is  the numinous Spirit of Place.  And She is also the forgotten, yet life sustaining  work of those unknown women who wove the ancient stories, who birthed our ancestors, the memory keepers and the comforters,  arising into the world again,  insisting that we  remember and reclaim.







Monday, December 31, 2018

The Encyclopedia of Women in World Religions


I want to announce a truly monumental work, the Encyclopedia of Women in World Religions, published recently  this year by ABC-Clio Publishersand edited by Susan de-Gaia Ph.d.  So many important Voices speak to the Re-Emergence of the Divine Feminine in our world.  It was my privilege to have a small inclusion in the Encyclopedia as well.  There is a hard copy and an EBook as well.  Congratulations to all who participated in this important project, and most especially to Susan de-Gaia for her monumental dedication 
in creating it.
Encyclopedia of Women in World Religions: 
Faith and Culture Across History

 Susan de-Gaia, Editor




Author-Subject List (PARTIAL ONLY)





Headword
Author Category
Contributors
Priestesses and Oracular Women
AFRICAN RELIGIONS
Dashu, Max;
Yoruba Religion
AFRICAN RELIGIONS
Finley, Mackenzie;
Body Art
AFRICAN RELIGIONS
Hahn, Allison;
Life Cycle Ceremonies
AFRICAN RELIGIONS
Hahn, Allison;
Rastafari
AFRICAN RELIGIONS
Hahn, Allison;
Candomble
AFRICAN RELIGIONS
Oleszkiewicz, Malgorzata;
African Religions in Diaspora
AFRICAN RELIGIONS
Razak, Arisika;
Art in Africa
AFRICAN RELIGIONS
Razak, Arisika;
Female Genital Mutilation
AFRICAN RELIGIONS
Team, Victoria;
Sibyls
Ancient Religions
Atkinson, Kenneth;
Diana
Ancient Religions
Bonar, Chance;
Homosexuality
Ancient Religions
Bonar, Chance;
Sappho
Ancient Religions
Christ, Carol;
Shamans in East Asia
Ancient Religions
Dashu, Max;
Hypatia
Ancient Religions
Dr. Vivianne Crowley Ph.D.: SW1
Inanna
Ancient Religions
Foust, Kristan: UTA;
Athena
Ancient Religions
Foust, Kristan;
Daily Lives of Women-Greek Roman
Ancient Religions
Foust, Kristan;
Egyptian Religion
Ancient Religions
Foust, Kristan;
Marriage, Ancient Greek and Roman Religions
Ancient Religions
Foust, Kristan;
Pre-Greek Goddesses in the Greek Pantheon
Ancient Religions
Haarmann, Harald: Inst of Archa
Priestesses and Their Staff in Ancient Greece
Ancient Religions
Haarmann, Harald: Inst of Archa
Sun Goddess
Ancient Religions
Haarmann, Harald: Inst of Archa
Delphic Oracle
Ancient Religions
Kerley, Gary;
Gorgon Medusa
Ancient Religions
Marler, Joan;
Eleusinian Mysteries, Greek and Roman Religio
Ancient Religions
Shipley, Morgan;
Gaea
Ancient Religions
Shipley, Morgan;
Mesopotamian Religion
Ancient Religions
Therese Rodin;
Ninhursaga
Ancient Religions
Therese Rodin;
Writers and Poets, Ancient Mesopotamian
Ancient Religions
Therese Rodin;
Religious Leadership, Ancient Roman Religions
Ancient Religions
Webb, Lewis;
Baha'i_Education
BAHA'I
Crosson, Selena;
Gender Roles
BAHA'I
Eschevarria, Lynn;
Divine Feminine
BAHA'I
Maneck, Susan: 39212;
Tahirih
BAHA'I
Maneck, Susan: 39212;
Women in Baha'i Scriptures
BAHA'I
Maneck, Susan: 39212;
Nuns, Theravada
BUDDHISM
Amore, Roy C.: University of Win
Therigatha
BUDDHISM
Amore, Roy C.: University of Win
Women in Early Buddhism
BUDDHISM
Amore, Roy C.: University of Win
Abortion
BUDDHISM
Bechtold, Brigitte;
Bodhisattvas
BUDDHISM
Bechtold, Brigitte;
Engaged Buddhism
BUDDHISM
Bechtold, Brigitte;
Gender Roles
BUDDHISM
Bechtold, Brigitte;
Ordination
BUDDHISM
Bechtold, Brigitte;
Nichiren
BUDDHISM
Cavaliere, Paola;

Zen BUDDHISM

Dance of Tara BUDDHISM

Feminine Virtues BUDDHISM

Lay Women in Theravada Buddhism BUDDHISM

Buddhism in America BUDDHISM

Pajapati BUDDHISM

Sacred Texts on Women BUDDHISM

Tea Ceremony BUDDHISM

Mahayana BUDDHISM

Women's Buddhist Networks BUDDHISM

Soka Gakkai BUDDHISM

Guan Yin BUDDHISM

Funeral Practices BUDDHISM

Dance BUDDHISM

Female Divinities BUDDHISM

Prajnaparamita BUDDHISM

Tara BUDDHISM

Tantra BUDDHISM

Julian of Norwich CHRISTIANITY

Chastity CHRISTIANITY

Monastic Life CHRISTIANITY

Christianity in America CHRISTIANITY

African American Women CHRISTIANITY

Christianity in Latin America CHRISTIANITY

Abortion CHRISTIANITY

Clothing CHRISTIANITY

Mormonism CHRISTIANITY

Homosexuality in Early to Early Modern Christia CHRISTIANITY

Mother of God CHRISTIANITY

Women in Early Christianity (1 to 300) CHRISTIANITY

Abbesses CHRISTIANITY

Education CHRISTIANITY

Pilgrimage CHRISTIANITY

Women in the Reformation CHRISTIANITY

Mary Magdalene CHRISTIANITY

Mystics CHRISTIANITY

Hildegard of Bingen CHRISTIANITY

Relationship and Social Models in Scripture CHRISTIANITY

and Archaeology

Sophia CHRISTIANITY

Missionaries CHRISTIANITY

Charity CHRISTIANITY

Medieval Women Monastics CHRISTIANITY

Roman Catholic Women Religious CHRISTIANITY

Polygamy CHRISTIANITY

Christianity in Africa CHRISTIANITY

Interfaith Dialogue, Post 9/11 CHRISTIANITY
Cavaliere, Paola;

de Gaia, Susan; Moses, Phyllis; Engelmajer, Pascale; Engelmajer, Pascale;

Foulks, Beverly;

Lee, Kenneth;

Lee, Kenneth;

Lee, Kenneth;

Lehrer, Tyler;

Lehrer, Tyler;

Morris, James;

Ms. Emily B. Simpson; Remoiville, Julie; Shaw, Miranda; Shaw, Miranda; Shaw, Miranda; Shaw, Miranda;

Shaw, Miranda; Lee, Kenneth: C Allen, Amanda;

Amanda Haste;

Amanda Haste;

Auguste, Nicol;

Bailey, Emily; Bartel, Rebecca; Bechtold, Brigitte; Bohleke, Karin;

Burns, William Earl (aka - Burns, Carroll, Charles;

Clark, Patricia;

Coltri, Marzia;

Crown, Nick;

Crown, Nick;

Crown, Nick; Darlage, Adam; de Gaia, Susan;

de Gaia, Susan; Haste, Amanda; Dr. Vivianne Crowley Ph.D.: SW1 Eisler, Riane;

Evans, Kathryn;

Gabryszewska, Maria;

Ganim, Carole;

Ganim, Carole;

Ganim, Carole;

Gullota, Daniel;

Hahn, Allison;

Haney, Marsha;

Anglican/Episcopalian Women Religious
CHRISTIANITY
Haste, Amanda;
Contemporary Women's Monasticism
CHRISTIANITY
Haste, Amanda;
Marriage, Divorce, Widowhood
CHRISTIANITY
Haste, Amanda;
Christianity in Europe
CHRISTIANITY
Magyar, Judit;
Orthodox Christianity
CHRISTIANITY
Magyar, Judit;
Christine de Pizan
CHRISTIANITY
McNary-Zak, Bernadette: Rhode
Stigmatics
CHRISTIANITY
Painter, Cassandra;
Apocrypha
CHRISTIANITY
Peek, Stephanie;
Art, Modern and Contemporary
CHRISTIANITY
Sachs, Hannah;
Fundamentalism
CHRISTIANITY
Sanders, Mary;
Ministers
CHRISTIANITY
Sanders, Mary;
Protestant Denominations
CHRISTIANITY
Sanders, Mary;
Fall, The
CHRISTIANITY
Shipley, Morgan;
Founders
CHRISTIANITY
Voorhees, Amy;
Middle Ages
CHRISTIANITY
Walter, Katherine: College at Bro
Saints
CHRISTIANITY
Walter, Katherine: College at Bro
Women Writers in Early and Medieval Christian CHRISTIANITY
Walter, Katherine: College at Bro
Sex and Gender
CHRISTIANITY
Walter, Katherine;
Widowhood
CHRISTIANITY
Walter, Katherine;
Cult of Female Chastity
CONFUCIANISM
Campbell, Josianne;
Feminine Virtues
CONFUCIANISM
Campbell, Josianne;
Classical Confucianism
CONFUCIANISM
Danner, Lukas;
Books for Women
CONFUCIANISM
de Gaia, Susan;
Filial Piety
CONFUCIANISM
Du, Yue;
Confucian Revivalism
CONFUCIANISM
McClenon, Julia: UCSB;
Motherhood
CONFUCIANISM
Remoiville, Julie;
Women's Changing Roles
CONFUCIANISM
Remoiville, Julie;
Healers
DAOISM
McClenon, Julia: UCSB;
Wu Wei
DAOISM
McClenon, Julia: UCSB;
Goddesses
DAOISM
Perreira, Todd;
Priestesses, Nuns, and Ordination
DAOISM
Perreira, Todd;
Daoism in China
DAOISM
Zhu, Liang;
Draupadi
HINDUISM
Agarwal, Komal;
Vedic Hinduism
HINDUISM
Agarwal, Komal;
Festivals
HINDUISM
Amazzone, Laura;
Pilgrimage
HINDUISM
Amazzone, Laura;
Shakti
HINDUISM
Amazzone, Laura;
Yoginis
HINDUISM
Amazzone, Laura;
Gurus and Saints
HINDUISM
Bhattacharyya, Monoloina;
Aditi
HINDUISM
Campbell, Josianne;
Caste
HINDUISM
Dandekar, Deepra: 12207;
Devadasis
HINDUISM
Dandekar, Deepra;
Household Shrines
HINDUISM
Dandekar, Deepra;
Ideals of Womanhood
HINDUISM
Dandekar, Deepra;
Durga and Kali
HINDUISM
Evans, Kathryn;
Fundamentalism
HINDUISM
Goulet, Nicole;
Renunciation
HINDUISM
Goulet, Nicole;

Devi
HINDUISM
Goulet, T. Nicole: Indiana Univer
Saraswati
HINDUISM
Goulet, T. Nicole: Indiana Univer
Sati
HINDUISM
John Capucci;
Tantra
HINDUISM
Kumar, Pawan;
Lakshmi
HINDUISM
Mitra, Semontee;
Marriage
HINDUISM
Mitra, Semontee;
Prakriti
HINDUISM
Mitra, Semontee;
Sacred Texts on Women
HINDUISM
Mitra, Semontee;
Radha and Gopi Girls
HINDUISM
MoChridhe, Race;
Dance
HINDUISM
Parveen, Rasheda;
Stage of Life Rituals
HINDUISM
Pillai, Rupa;
Matriliny
HINDUISM
Rath, Akshaya: National Inst of T
Bhakti
HINDUISM
Rath, Akshaya;
Arts (Native American)
INDIGENOUS RELIGIONS
Anton, Beata;
Ceremonies (Native American)
INDIGENOUS RELIGIONS
Anton, Beata;
Clothing (Native American)
INDIGENOUS RELIGIONS
Anton, Beata;
Marriage and Social Status (Native American)
INDIGENOUS RELIGIONS
Anton, Beata;
Sacred Spirits (Native American)
INDIGENOUS RELIGIONS
Anton, Beata;
Women Warriors (Native American
INDIGENOUS RELIGIONS
Dry, David;
Ancestors (Native American)
INDIGENOUS RELIGIONS
Evans, Kathryn;
Creation Stories (Native American)
INDIGENOUS RELIGIONS
Evans, Kathryn;
Nature (Native American)
INDIGENOUS RELIGIONS
Evans, Kathryn;
Sacred Place (Native American)
INDIGENOUS RELIGIONS
Evans, Kathryn;
Shamanism in Eurasian cultures
INDIGENOUS RELIGIONS
Haarmann, Harald: Inst of Archa
Shamans in Korea
INDIGENOUS RELIGIONS
Kendall, Laurel: American Museu
Matriarchies
INDIGENOUS RELIGIONS
Mann, Barbara: University of Tol
Activism (Native American)
INDIGENOUS RELIGIONS
Shipley, Morgan;
Medicine Women (Native American)
INDIGENOUS RELIGIONS
Shipley, Morgan;
Kinship (Native American)
INDIGENOUS RELIGIONS
Stover, Dale;
Islam in Africa
ISLAM
Acquah, Lady Jane: ljane26@gm
Hawwa
ISLAM
Agha-Jaffar, Tamara;
Maryam
ISLAM
Agha-Jaffar, Tamara;
Islam in America
ISLAM
Brandon, Alexandra;
Peacemaking
ISLAM
Fitriyah, Lailatul;
Honor
ISLAM
Helms, Barbara;
Saints, Sufi
ISLAM
Helms, Barbara;
Druze
ISLAM
Khaizran, Yusri;
Sufism
ISLAM
Khan, Shahida: National Institute
Ideal Woman
ISLAM
Lob, Elisabetta;
Education
ISLAM
Olomi, Ali;
Islam in the Middle East
ISLAM
Rahman, Farhana;
Polygamy
ISLAM
Rahman, Farhana;
Prophets Wives
ISLAM
Rahman, Farhana;
Purdah
ISLAM
Rahman, Farhana;
Qur'an and Hadith
ISLAM
Rahman, Farhana;
Feminism
ISLAM
Rannveig Jetne Haga;
Coverings
ISLAM
Tayyen, Sana;

Hagar
ISLAM
Tayyen, Sana;
Marriage and Divorce
ISLAM
Tayyen, Sana;
Pilgrimage
ISLAM
Tayyen, Sana;
Reform
ISLAM
Tayyen, Sana;
Shari'a
ISLAM
Tayyen, Sana;
Women's Organizations
ISLAM
Tayyen, Sana;
Female Genital Mutilation
ISLAM
Team, Victoria;
Islam in Europe
ISLAM
Teodorescu, Adriana;
Diaspora
ISLAM
Valentina Fedele;
Fatima
ISLAM
Valentina Fedele;
Jina
JAINISM
Clines, Gregory;
Monastics and Nuns
JAINISM
Clines, Gregory;
Lay Women
JAINISM
de Gaia, Susan;
Female Deities
JAINISM
Mitra, Semontee;
Ritual
JAINISM
Mukherjee, Asha;
Bat Mitzvah
JUDAISM
Adelman, Penina;
Ancient Judaism
JUDAISM
Atkinson, Kenneth: Univ of Nort
Salome Alexandra
JUDAISM
Atkinson, Kenneth;
Shabbat
JUDAISM
Balogh, Amy;
Feminist and Women's Movements
JUDAISM
Beitler, Ruth: U.S. Military Acade
Israel
JUDAISM
Beitler, Ruth: U.S. Military Acade
Marriage and Divorce
JUDAISM
Beitler, Ruth: U.S. Military Acade
Rosh Hodesh
JUDAISM
Berrin, Susan;
American Denominations 1850 to Present
JUDAISM
Breitzer, Susan Roth: susan.breit
Judaism in America
JUDAISM
Breitzer, Susan Roth: susan.breit
Women and Work
JUDAISM
Breitzer, Susan Roth: susan.breit
Modern and Contemporary Judaism
JUDAISM
Breitzer, Susan;
Festivals and Holy Days
JUDAISM
Fadden, John;
Hebrew Bible
JUDAISM
Fadden, John;
Rabbis
JUDAISM
Fadden, John;
Mitzvah
JUDAISM
Goldhaber-Gordon, Ilana;
Lilith
JUDAISM
Grenn, D'vorah: The Lilith Institu
Priestesses
JUDAISM
Grenn, Dvorah;
Goddesses
JUDAISM
Hammer, Jill;
Synagogue
JUDAISM
Mayne, Hannah;
Peacemaking
JUDAISM
Messina, Adele;
Performance
JUDAISM
Pascal, Julia;
Judaism in Europe
JUDAISM
Roos, Lena: Uppsala University;
Sephardic and Mizrachi Judaisms
JUDAISM
Roos, Lena: Uppsala University;
Education
JUDAISM
Roos, Lena;
Food
JUDAISM
Roos, Lena;
Sex and Gender
JUDAISM
Roos, Lena;
Shabbat
JUDAISM
Sachs, Hannah;
Holocaust
JUDAISM
Saidel, Rochelle;
Midrash
JUDAISM
Sasso, Sandy;
Hasidism
JUDAISM
Shipley, Morgan;
Kabbalah
JUDAISM
Shipley, Morgan;