T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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997.1 | | CADLAC::GLIDEWELL | Wow! It's The Abyss! | Tue Feb 27 1990 21:15 | 7 |
| .0 Bonnie R.
Reading your note, Bonnie, made me want to write about 50 pages
of Arggghhh! I will curb myself and simply say that I feel
nauseous while reading things such as "women's real power: spiritual
vitality and psychological gifts."
|
997.2 | | GEMVAX::KOTTLER | | Wed Feb 28 1990 08:54 | 26 |
|
re -.1
Why nauseous?
I thought the article was great. It's especially informative for people
living in the Boston area. It talks about the formation of the magazine
called *Woman of Power* (based in Somerville), which started in 1984 and
has as its primary objective "to nurture the development of women's
spirituality as a world view and as a political movement."
A quote from that magazine's editor, Char McKee, states that "women are
withdrawing our allegiance to patriarchal gods and governments and
withdrawing our consent to patriarchal imaginings...We are envisioning
new myths of ourselves, new ways of relating, new rituals and dreams
and symbols, new forms of community."
In general the article describes ways in which women (for a change) are
"naming the sacred".
Sounds to me like the best thing that's happened to women since...the
safety pin?
So why "aarrgh"?
Dorian
|
997.3 | Why not? | SUPER::EVANS | I'm baa-ack | Wed Feb 28 1990 14:20 | 16 |
| If I got anything out of the "Power of Myth" (Campbell, w/Moyers)
it was that our myths, religious and otherwise, form the culture to
a great extent - the values, the mores, how we treat each other.
To explore, revive, rekindle, create women-positive, women-centered,
women-empowering myths, stories, etc. is a very positive idea to me.
Campbell says (I believe) that our old myths are not apt for today's
living - we've essentially outrun our myths, archetypes, stories, etc.
And we will need to make new ones for the future, especially so the
youth will have these things to look to. Why shouldn't these new ones
reflect the coming of women into society, into power, into our
birthright?
--DE
|
997.4 | I Can See It in Foxboro Now | FDCV01::ROSS | | Wed Feb 28 1990 14:29 | 25 |
| I should know better by now, but...............
Paul Revere, galloping along to warn the residents:
"The Patriarchs are Coming,
The Patriarchs are Coming"
Or how about (for those of us who live in the Northeast), and find
ourselves lost on U.S. Route 1 or I95:
"Next Exit, Sullivan Stadium,
Home of the New England Patriarchs"
Re: .0,
Hi, Bonnie :)
Re: .1,
Hi, Meigs :)
Alan
|
997.5 | re .4 - one man's myth is another man's take...;-) | GEMVAX::KOTTLER | | Wed Feb 28 1990 15:19 | 1 |
|
|
997.6 | | GEMVAX::KOTTLER | | Wed Feb 28 1990 16:47 | 14 |
|
Over lunch today I went to the Native Spirit bookstore in Sudbury that's
mentioned in the Globe article on the new feminism, and that's kind of a
center for Native American and feminist/goddess spiritual/environmentally
caring viewpoints and activities. It's a wonderful place, with books,
cards, crafts, jewelry, workshops, etc. based on pertinent mythology and
ecology and history. Although there's some element of what's described
critically in the article as the "New Age smorgasbord approach to matters
of psyche and spirit" -- which "implicitly supports the patriarchal
assumption of the hierarchy of man over the rest of nature" -- it's not
overplayed. Just being in the place made me feel validated as a female
human bean!
Dorian
|
997.7 | | ULTRA::ZURKO | We're more paranoid than you are. | Thu Mar 01 1990 12:26 | 10 |
| I think I had a bit of the same reaction as Meigs to that _particular_ line in
the article, though I thoroughly enjoyed the quotes and 'facts'. Basically, I
reacted negatively to where women's power _really_ lies because it can be
twisted to support the myth that women really can't be powerful in a
patriarchal instution (like business and industry, where we are all sitting
right this very minute).
However, I love the emphasis on validating the 'other' aspects; spirituality
and connectedness.
Mez
|
997.8 | Way to go, Globe! | OPHION::SILK | | Fri Mar 02 1990 22:01 | 16 |
| That's what I love about the Boston Globe--they're right on top
of the news! As far as I remember, the women's spirituality
movement was rather big in the Boston area starting in the MID-70s,
somewhere around the bicentennial!!!!
I mean, there were workshops, conferences, articles in the feminist
press, classes, etc. "Feminism's new face" indeed!
Perhaps it's noteworthy to the Globe now since religion is making such
a big comeback and you have all that Campbell/Moyers stuff on TV.
(By the way, I think that Campbell's idea is that the old myths ARE
useful (and used) today. I think he's saying that the inner truths
of the myths are basic human stories. I have problems with him
myself; just trying to interpret that part fairly.)
Nina
|
997.9 | I suppose I'll have to go read the article | TLE::RANDALL | living on another planet | Mon Mar 05 1990 16:10 | 12 |
| I don't get this.
Do women have a monopoly on spirituality and psychological
whatever it was? I've always preferred the analytical, myself,
and men have told me that's unfeminine. Now it sounds like women
are telling me that's unfeminine.
And why can't men explore a new, affirming, integrated
spirituality too? Are they to be required to stick with their old
religions?
--bonnie, very puzzled
|
997.10 | | GEMVAX::KOTTLER | | Mon Mar 05 1990 16:41 | 16 |
|
Re .9 -
Women don't have a monopoly on spirituality. They have a different one. To
fully characterize it would take too long, but I think it's been more oriented
towards finding the sacred in the everyday, down-to-earth, ordinary things of
life, as opposed to a more transcendent, abstract spirituality.
Also, although there may well be disagreement on what "women's
spirituality" *is*, there's no denying that whatever it is, it was a lot
more flourishing in very ancient times and that there was a specific period
during which it was - as it now largely remains - suppressed, in favor of
the dominant patriarchal religions, which would fall more in the category of
men's spirituality. So, in this article, there's a sense of rediscovering
and reclaiming what has been lost, particularly lost to women.
|
997.11 | yes, but... | VIA::HEFFERNAN | Juggling Fool | Mon Mar 05 1990 17:21 | 17 |
| RE: <<< Note 997.10 by GEMVAX::KOTTLER >>>
>Women don't have a monopoly on spirituality. They have a different one. To
>fully characterize it would take too long, but I think it's been more oriented
>towards finding the sacred in the everyday, down-to-earth, ordinary things of
>life, as opposed to a more transcendent, abstract spirituality.
I think it's great that women are discovering their spiritual sides in
whatever form they choose.
Many religions are focused on "finding the sacred" in the ordinary. I
would say Zen Buddhism and Native American traditionals as examples.
However, they are neither male or female religions (in my opinion)...
|
997.12 | | CADSE::GLIDEWELL | Wow! It's The Abyss! | Mon Mar 05 1990 20:00 | 40 |
| .0 WMOIS::B_REINKE
> I'd strongly encourage anyone with access to a copy of
> the Globe to read the article.
I read the article and now I really feel queasy. Yucko!! Each
new paragraph appeared before me, verily, like a fresh cow pie.
Quite a number of people quoted in this article seem to be
disappointed that feminist political organizations do not answer
their souls' deepest need! Of course one wants more from life than
that sought by one's PAC!!!
>Feminism's new face
The expression "new face" implies a radical change of behavior. Not an
enlargement; a change. The feminist movement has not swapped
spirituality for polical action; it does not have a new face.
> [the article] describes the new direction that feminism is headed ...
The feminist movement is *very* large, very dispersed. To speak
of a "new direction" for such a mass movement based on the info in
this article is baby-talk. Just hot air.
> women's real power: spiritual vitality and psychological gifts
What women? DECies? Americans? The White American middle class?
Sioux? Mundagamore? Mothers? Must I have a given level of estogen to
enjoy this real power?
The writer seems to be suffering a peculiar case of Rousseau's nobel
savage; that is, if the big bad patriarchy didn't corrupt our souls,
we [women] would be overflowing with spiritual vitality and psychological
gifts. This type of logic should vanish in the 8th grade.
Hmmmm ... Sigh. I've expressed myself very poorly in this note ... but
the notions put forth in this article are so deeply offensive to me
... I feel like I've been reading a touchy-feely feminine variation of
Aryian nation.
|
997.13 | hold your dung... | GEMVAX::KOTTLER | | Tue Mar 06 1990 09:25 | 38 |
|
re .12, fresh cow pie -
I forget, did they print the recipe for that? ;-)
But seriously. Why are you so offended? Do you agree that women have
been defined as non-spiritual beings since the rise of the great
religions we have today; eliminated from the divine, for starters, and
then for the most part prohibited from belonging to the priesthood,
excused from prayer, denied souls, kept off the altar, etc....all of
which was very consistent with the great religions' definition of woman
as carnal temptress, unclean in body, the very antithesis of spiritual?
Until recently the very phrase "women's spirituality" would seem to have
been an oxymoron.
So now women are again waking up to their rights in the political,
social, economic, and other spheres. As part of that they may also want
to get back in touch with their lost spirituality. Where would you suggest
they go to find it? Within existing, traditionally male-dominated
religions that for millennia hardly even acknowledged there could be
such a thing as women's spirituality? In the traditional Garden of Eden
myth, with sinful Eve the prototype for all woman = cause of mankind's fall,
subject to eternal punishment in the form of unalleviated childbirth?
Surely we can do better than this kind of woman-defeating, patriarchy-
serving mythology. As I read the article (and as someone in this string
suggested), the search for new mythologies more appropriate to women's
true nature and ability is part of what's going on. Such mythologies
are coming, in part, from rising awareness of the ancient Goddess
religion with its affirmation of woman as creative, powerful human
beings (and, incidentally, its caring, non-dominating attitude toward
nature and the earth).
As for all this being a "new face" of feminism, I agree that it
shouldn't be seen as an *alternative* to women's political action.
It should be in addition to it; the two should connect.
Dorian
|
997.14 | | RANGER::TARBET | Dat �r som fanden! | Tue Mar 06 1990 10:43 | 21 |
| I think of the rediscovery of Goddess-based religions as something that
happened within the last 10 years or so, and that they had been
essentially _obliterated_ before that, completely invisible.
So it came a real shock to pick up a sf/fantasy novel written by Poul
Anderson in the late 50s(!!) that centers on the war between the
matriarchal and patriarchal religions during the bronze/neolithic age!
I've no idea how much research he did (for those who don't know who he
is, he's a Minnesota-born-and-raised physicist-turned-prominent-author,
of Danish ancestry (and proud of it!)) but his thesis in the book is
that the Goddess religions produced a calm, stable, earth-based,
tradition-bound culture in which non-ritualised violence was
essentially unknown because interpersonal relationships were so
important. He contrasted that with rather unstable, creative, sky-
based patriarchial religions from (in the book) the Russian steppes in
which lasting interpersonal relationships extended no further than
one's own clan and violence in the service of personal goals was just
fine because "real" life only began after you were dead.
=maggie
|
997.15 | And a wonderful person | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Tue Mar 06 1990 11:53 | 6 |
| Maggie,
Poul is a real scholar, which show in everything from _Three_Hearts_
_and_Three_Lions_ to _Hrolf_Kraki's_Saga_ to "Uncleavish Truethinking".
Ann B.
|
997.16 | fact and fiction | GEMVAX::KOTTLER | | Tue Mar 06 1990 12:06 | 24 |
|
re .14 -
Maybe it was ignored because it was presented as science fiction?
> his thesis in the book is that the Goddess religions produced a calm,
> stable, earth-based, tradition-bound culture in which non-ritualised
> violence was essentially unknown because interpersonal relationships were
> so important.
Sounds a lot like what more recent books (not science fiction) such as When
God Was a Woman, The Chalice and the Blade, and the works of archeologist
Maria Gimbutas have been documenting.
> He contrasted that with rather unstable, creative, sky-based patriarchial
> religions from (in the book) the Russian steppes in which lasting
> interpersonal relationships extended no further than one's own clan and
> violence in the service of personal goals was just fine because "real" life
> only began after you were dead.
Ditto.
|
997.17 | | RANGER::TARBET | Dat �r som fanden! | Tue Mar 06 1990 12:11 | 7 |
| I didn't mean that it was ignored, particularly, Dorian, though you're
right that it probably was in fact ignored because it took the form of
a novel. I was just surprised that someone --even Poul :-) --could
develop such a well-painted picture at a time when the basic research
apparently wasn't yet available!
=maggie
|
997.18 | | GEMVAX::KOTTLER | | Tue Mar 06 1990 12:16 | 4 |
| re .17 -
Okay, I see what you're saying. What's the name of the book? (One of
the ones Ann mentioned?)
|
997.19 | have a look at door 3 | SA1794::CHARBONND | Mail SPWACY::CHARBONND | Tue Mar 06 1990 12:42 | 16 |
|
re .13 WADR, I think you're neglecting the fact that a few
of us are atheists who believe that *all* religions are
equally irrational, and that substituting one form of
mysticism for another is not the answer. I don't get
offended by anybody's religious beliefs as such, and I rarely
bother to argue against anybody's beliefs, but I am very
tired of having another choice *totally* neglected, unconsidered,
unacknowledged. I doubt that I'm the only one who feels this way.
As I said a long time age, atheism is gender-neutral. And (IMO)
a vast improvement over those patriarchal religions that you
keep grousing about. Superior to 'goddess' religions ? Let's
take *that* argument elsewhere.
Dana
|
997.20 | further down the rathole | SA1794::CHARBONND | Mail SPWACY::CHARBONND | Tue Mar 06 1990 12:44 | 3 |
| re .14 Maggie, which PA novel or story is that ? Since I
collect his work, it should pop into mind, but old age is
taking its toll, alas.
|
997.21 | | RANGER::TARBET | Dat �r som fanden! | Tue Mar 06 1990 12:49 | 3 |
| <--(.18? & .20)
I don't recall right now :-), I'll look it up.
|
997.22 | I'm obviously still missing something | TLE::CHONO::RANDALL | On another planet | Tue Mar 06 1990 14:00 | 22 |
| re: .10
>Women don't have a monopoly on spirituality. They have a different one.
Huh? Come again?? Women have different souls from men???????????
>To fully characterize it would take too long, but I think it's been more oriented
>towards finding the sacred in the everyday, down-to-earth, ordinary things of
>life, as opposed to a more transcendent, abstract spirituality.
And these are things that men don't and can't want?
Does somebody have a copy of the article they could send me? Maybe that
would help clarify this for me. I must be missing a point here.
Yes, traditional religious structures have been sexist -- one could hardly
expect them to have a different viewpoint than the rest of society. But I
never felt like they denied me my soul! [that was .12, not .10] Of course
I live in 20th century USA, not 15th century Italy, so I may be believing
the wrong thing.
--bonnie
|
997.23 | | GEMVAX::KOTTLER | | Tue Mar 06 1990 14:42 | 6 |
| re .22
I have copies of the article, if you send me your address I'll mail you
one.
Dorian
|
997.24 | but I'll be back | TLE::CHONO::RANDALL | On another planet | Tue Mar 06 1990 15:23 | 10 |
|
Thanks for offering to send me the article, Dorian, but somebody
else beat you to it. Womannoters are so helpful!
I'm not going to comment any more here until I get the article and have
a chance to read it -- I hate trying to argue with something based on
what others have said about it. It's not a very valid way to have an
enlightened discussion . . . I'm sure I've already misreacted.
--bonnie
|
997.25 | Some random comments | CSC32::M_VALENZA | Note in your birthday suit. | Wed Mar 07 1990 00:28 | 112 |
| My view is that "spirituality" is not exactly the same as "religion",
or at least religious dogma. I would like to believe that one can be
spiritual without taking a particular set of religious dogmas or myths
literally. Unfortunately, it often seems that when you buy into a
spirituality you have to accept the whole religious package, myths and
all. This is commonly the case with the Western religions. The way I
see it, though, is that different religions are simply different paths
for spirituality, and the associated myths are useful metaphors for
those paths. It seems, however, that most Western religions don't
quite see it that way.
I'm not about to say that everyone needs a "spirituality", though.
Atheism is a perfectly valid decision for some to choose, which I can
respect and understand. The irrationality and intolerance that seems
to be associated with so much of religion often makes it seem like a
rather unappealing personal choice. However, for some, mysticism and
spirituality are valid choices in life. This is true for both women
and men.
In my case, having been brought up in a more or less fundamentalist
Christian environment, I found that, once I reached a certain age, I
could no longer accept the normative myths of Christianity. But, after
many years of subsequent atheism, I also later discovered a craving for
a "spirituality" that the religion of my upbringing once offered me.
Unfortunately, this presented a problem, since I rejected (and still do
reject) the dogmas of that religion. The trick was to apply
spirituality to my essentially humanist and secular outlook--no mean
feat, as it turns out. This is particularly difficult since the
Western religious tradition has shaped my spirituality in my youth, not
to mention the fact that it has shaped the culture I live in; it is in
a sense still with me, and I cannot formulate any new spirituality
without coming to grips with that. I often feel caught in the middle
between fundamentalist irrationality on the one hand, and an atheism
that is hostile to religion, on the other; furthermore, liberal
Christianity is not an acceptable middle ground for me, because I don't
accept Christian doctrine, in any form. And yet, in a small way that
religion is still a part of me.
So I have been engaged in an ongoing effort at formulating my own
"spirituality", which I distinguish from religion. Although I have no
definite opinions about the existence or nature of "God", I do find
God-talk to be useful in my own spiritual explorations. The kind of
God-talk I find agreeable has nothing in common with that of
fundamentalist Christianity. Curiously, the God-talk of Jewish and
Christian feminist theology is much closer to my own conception,
despite the alleged differences between male and female spirituality.
This is one reason why I do not believe that men and women necessarily
have different spiritualities, although in some cases individuals do
fit the stereotype.
One of my favorite passages from the Buddhist literature involves a
dialogue said to have occurred between the Buddha and a questioner who
was disturbed that the Buddha would not provide any grand theological
explanations:
These theories which the Blessed One has left unexplained, has set
aside and rejected--that the world is eternal, that the world is
not eternal, that the world is finite, that the world is infinite,
that the soul and body are identical, that the soul is one thing
and the body another, that the saint exists after death, that the
saint does not exist after death, that the saint both exists and
does not exist after death, that the saint neither exists nor does
not exist after death--these the Blessed One does not explain to
me. And the fact that the Blessed One does not explain them to me
does not please me nor suit me.
Alas, many people do need definite answers to those kinds of questions;
that is why religions come up with detailed dogmas to explain these
things, and fundamentalism is simply this phenomenon taken to the
extreme, because it offers *all* the answers, and will tolerate no
alternatives. In this case, Buddha provides a long answer that boils
down to the fact that he is too worried about providing enlightenment
in the here and now to worry about such theological matters. In my
view, the Eightfold Path is one perfectly legitimate path of
spirituality, just as there are other paths. Again, I distinguish
between spirituality and religious dogma. And we can see that anyone,
male or female, can legitimately seek out spirituality from any
religious tradition, because of the spiritual value it offers them.
Myths and metaphors associated with that religion may help or hinder
them on their spiritual paths, and that is something they have to deal
with. It is also something that others who think they know better often
feel they have the right to determine for them.
One of the greatest works of religious literature, Eastern or Western,
"patriarchal" or "matriarchal", is the Bhagavad Gita. The message of
universal love contained within is timeless. And yet, when I read the
passage where Sri Krishna tells Arjuna that "the distinctions of caste,
guna, and karma have come from me," I have to cringe. Abhoring the
caste system is no reason to reject Hinduism as utterly worthless,
however. The bhakti movement of a thousand years ago saw Shiva
worshipers who rejected the caste system without utterly rejecting
Hinduism. Similarly, feminists in the Western religious tradition are
able to adhere to their faiths while rejecting the sexist elements
contained within. Those who dogmatically contend that feminist
Christianity is an oxymoron merely demonstrate their own intolerance.
As one of the free-verse lyrics from the bhakti movement says:
Look here, dear fellow:
I wear these men's clothes
only for you.
Sometimes I am man,
sometimes I am woman.
O lord of the meeting rivers
I'll make war for you
but I'll be your devotees' bride.
Basavanna 703
-- Mike
|
997.26 | Who "names the sacred"? | GEMVAX::KOTTLER | | Wed Mar 07 1990 08:38 | 36 |
| re .19 -
"grousing" about patriarchal religions - careful now, I might get ruffled!
;-)
Your point about atheism is interesting. I'm one myself, or somewhere
between that and an agnostic. Yet to me the spiritual element is vital.
Does your brand of atheism exclude the spiritual? Because if it does, I
don't think it's relevant here.
The article concerns women seeking their spirituality. Probably most people
do seek it within organized religion. The article indicates that some women
are feeling their spiritual needs have not been met by the great patr.
religions, in which only men have "named the sacred," in which spirit tends
to be abstract and out-of-life and which tend to devalue women, who may
seek a spirituality that is more immanent, down-to-earth, woman-valuing,
and earth-revering. As the article documents, some women are going outside
their "religions of birth" to find that spirituality (as in their
explorations of the ancient goddess religions, or not in *any* religion),
while others are trying to change things to be more congenial to women
within the dominant patr. religions.
One reason I think all this is particularly important now is that as Dawn
noted in .3, taking her cue from Joseph Campbell, it's to a great extent
the myths - religions and otherwise - that form a culture, the values,
mores, and ways we treat each other. These days we could sure do with a few
values along the lines of egalitarianism and reverence for women and for
nature and the earth (all apparently part of those old goddess religions),
just for starters!
If I have time I'll type in some more detailed passages from the article.
As for atheism being "gender-free" - you mean like in Russia?
Dorian
|
997.27 | | SA1794::CHARBONND | Mail SPWACY::CHARBONND | Wed Mar 07 1990 09:12 | 8 |
| I don't focus on the spiritual for the simple reason that I
don't accept the spiritual/physical or mind/body dichotomy
as a given. All religions thrive on this dichotomy.
As for Russia, their so-called atheism consists of substituting
a new irrational belief for an old one.
Dana
|
997.28 | some parts from the article | GEMVAX::KOTTLER | | Wed Mar 07 1990 10:14 | 85 |
|
"Feminist spirituality declares that God is not an external (or male) force
situated somewhere 'out' or 'up' there. The sacred is not disembodied or
transcendent, the New Feminists say. Instead, we are all saturated and
surrounded by the sacred. Our every daily act partakes of it.
"Thus follows a rejection of hierarchical assignments within the plan of
creation. The Genesis version of events, in which man was authorized to
'have dominion' over the animals - and, by implication, over women - is
scorned by New Feminists as unreal, patriarchal, and contrary to the life
principle. They believe passionately in the notion of interconnectedness
amid diversity of a dynamic system in which every part has unique and
irreplaceable value....
"'Male naming in patriarchal religion has given us a strange landscape of
the sacred, Dodson Gray writes in the introduction [to a book called
*Sacred Dimensions of Women's Experience*....A few places, a few people, a
few occasions are seen to concentrate and to embody the holy....Women's
renaming of the sacred is quite different....Instead of withdrawing from
the reality of life to find sacredness, we go toward that reality - toward
bodies, toward nature, toward food, toward dust, toward transitory moments
in relationships. And wherever we look, we find that which nourishes and
deepens us.
"Recent archeological findings and feminist scholarship have provided
provocative reinforcement to women's search for spiritual consciousness in
their substantiations of an ancient goddess-worshipping culture that
extended across Europe. This culture endured for almost twice as long as
the Christian era and appears to have been rooted in a world-view very
similar to that being defined by feminists of the 1990s.
"As bits and pieces of this history became available in the early '80s, a
number of writers began to create a literature of women's spiritual
practices.
"The Womanspirit movement is perhaps the most accessible of these.
Womanspirit practice relies on guided meditation, dream analysis, natural
healing techniques, and personal rituals in one's home and among groups of
like-minded women. Its primary aim is to get women to recognize and
celebrate the significant moments and passages in their own lives, rather
than those ordained by the traditional liturgical calendar.
"'Rituals in harmony with earth, moon, and sun are a form of meditation on
this existence that we live,' says San Francisco-based writer Hallie
Iglehart Austen, author of the leading Womanspirit work by the same name.
'It's really important to realize that we've forgotten who nature is, how
nature works. And therefore, we've forgotten what our existence is.'
"Goddess-centerd spiritual practices are a second element within the
feminist spirituality movement, and this element is the fastest-growing
one. In September, Harper & Row, San Francisco, published the first
authoritative work on the ancient goddess culture, *The Language of the
Goddess*, by UCLA archeologist Marija Gimbutas. Gimbutas collected,
identified, and analyzed 2,000 artifacts from neolithic Europe, a period
ranging from about 7000 to 3500 B.C., about which no previous coherent
cultural picture had been established.
"By cataloging the symbols found on statues and ritual vessels, Gimbutas
concluded that neolithic Europe was an earth-centered, goddess-worshiping,
"gylantic" culture - that is, a culture in which women and men shared
equally the tasks of food gathering, child rearing, governance, and sacred
ritual making. It was as well a culture that produce no weaponry, Gimbutas
claims. Instead of fortifications, archeologists have unearthed temples,
shrines, and a wealth of everyday objects invested with symbols of the
goddess.
"This goddess signified no single aspect of elemental life, such as
"fertility." Instead, according to Gimbutas, "the Goddess in all her
manifestations was a symbol of the unity of all life in Nature," including
death and transformation.
"Her sacred objects are not in themselves the subjects of slavish devotion
today. Rather, they support a different worldview, before Europe was
overrun by the Indo-Europeans and transformed into a militarized,
patriarchal culture. From that point, Gimbutas argues, the goddess
fractured into the quasi-militaristic figures in the Greek pantheon and was
later echoed by the Virgin Mary and female Christian saints.
"To 'worship' the goddess today, then, is to confront the issues of gender,
power, and myth in contemporary culture and to try to create new values and
standard of 'right action' by consecrating, often through rituals, women's
natural experiences, and the elements of the earth...."
There's more, focussing on writings of feminist psychiatrists at Mclean
Hospital and the Stone Center...
|
997.29 | really? | VIA::HEFFERNAN | Juggling Fool | Wed Mar 07 1990 12:29 | 13 |
| RE: <<< Note 997.27 by SA1794::CHARBONND "Mail SPWACY::CHARBONND" >>>
> I don't focus on the spiritual for the simple reason that I
> don't accept the spiritual/physical or mind/body dichotomy
> as a given. All religions thrive on this dichotomy.
Dana, you seem very sure of this statement. Zen Buddhism, Native
tradtions, and Wiccan traditions would be three counterexamples of
this claim.
But perhaps I misunderstand your claim. It was somewhat terse.
|
997.30 | | SA1794::CHARBONND | Mail SPWACY::CHARBONND | Wed Mar 07 1990 12:46 | 1 |
| OK. *Most* religions thrive on this dichotomy.
|
997.31 | a fourth counterexample - goddess-based religion | GEMVAX::KOTTLER | | Wed Mar 07 1990 13:09 | 1 |
|
|
997.32 | long random comment on religion | VIA::HEFFERNAN | Juggling Fool | Wed Mar 07 1990 13:40 | 133 |
| RE: <<< Note 997.28 by GEMVAX::KOTTLER >>>
>"Feminist spirituality declares that God is not an external (or male) force
>situated somewhere 'out' or 'up' there. The sacred is not disembodied or
>transcendent, the New Feminists say. Instead, we are all saturated and
>surrounded by the sacred. Our every daily act partakes of it.
.
.
.
This if fine and on the right track (in my view). My only comment is
that other religions have been teaching the same things for thousands
of years (even in the Christian mystical traditions such as Meister
Eckhardt and the Gnostics) for example Buddhist, Taoist, and Native
American traditions. So, this teaching mentioned above is not
exlusive to the New Feminist Spiritual Tradtion or any other.
The quote also mentions the famous "have dominion over" statement from
Genesis which has been widely critisized from a Feminist and also
Native American viewpoint (see the book "God Is Red"). I know that
many Christians today are interpretting this to me stewardship over
earth or protecter of the earth. So, these statements can be
interpretting in different ways. And who knows how some of these
things have been translated over years. Maybe before we tear
everything that has come before down in our anger, we can really look
at has come before and find some space so that we can all co-exist
bring together what we have in common.
Let me describe this journey that I have gone thru. I was raised in
Catholic schools starting from Kindagarten to eight grade. By about
sixth grade, I was calling myself an atheist and questioning the nuns
about evolution and how it disagreed with Genesis. Luckily I had a
real liberal nun and lay teachers after that. Anyways, I hated what I
was in the practicing Catholics and the Church and what the message
was supposed to be. So for a long time, I was Mr Rational and
interested in logic, philosophy, and finding the truth thru analysis.
I studied the Philosophy of mind extensively and quantum physics, the
theory of computuation, AI, anything that was concerned with finding
ultimate truths thru analysis. But this too seems to be a dead end.
Many of the sciences themselves were pointing towards the limitations
of the rational method itself. Things the Uncertainty principle and
Godel's Theorum I believe point to the limits of thought itself. And
in my own life, which I was destroying with alcohol, lonliness, and a
desire for power and success, thinking didn't seem to helping much.
It become clear that I needed to stop analyzing and start living and
I was able to solve my most pressing problems and start living. And
at this time, I began to reconnect with the which is unnamable, the
force that Dorin's quote mentions above, that which we all have as a
birthright. And this is not be found with thinking about it. It has
to be experienced with a quiet mind. If you look at most religious
traditions in the world, they have in common meditation, prayer,
and chanting. These, I think are the LSD (least common denominator)
of our religious traditions. The rituals and concepts vary but I
think they basically point to the same thing. And that is, that we
all have a quiet, fully enlightened Mind, that is intimately connected
with all beings and things in the universe. That our concept of a
separate self is just that, a concept we have learned, that can
prevent us from seeing the World As It is.
But I cannot prove this with thinking because thinking is part of the
problem. If you have an idea about something, then you are no longer
free to really see that something! Thinking is a great tool and it
comes in handy. The probelm is that we think it is everything and our
ideas, opinions, self-images, and attachments to things define our
cage and cause ourselves, those around, and the world at large great
suffering. But I hope some people will check this out for themselves
in whatever way works for them and see if it is correct or not. This
is not something outside yourself that someone else can teach you or
give to you and it takes alot of hard work.
Anyways, back to my story, I found something missing. When I used to
go fishing on the river or explore the fields near my house, I could
get quiet just appreciate everything around me and I found that I
missed this and wanted to get in touch with it again. So I started
going to UU church which for me was a way to be religious again in an
accepting environment where I didn't have to worry about my own
reaction to what I perceived as dogma. And that lead me to a practice
and investigation of Eastern Relgions which I had been interested in
for a long time. I quickly discovered that practicing religion and
studying religion are COMPLETELY DIFFERENT THINGS! It's like I
mentioned before in trying to understand thinking by thinking about
it. You can never see the larger picture. It would be like trying to
look at an elephant through a straw from 3 inches away.
And then there was a period where I mistook the new teaching for the
truth and thought my way was the best way and others were not as good
(even if I did not say so directly).
Now, it is a lifelong journey and practice and the more I practice the
less I know about it in a conceptual sense and the more things just
become clear.
There are many paths to the top of the mountain. They all lead to the
same place (which is firstly towards yourself and then towards being
enlightened by the phenomonal world).
An interesting question is what is our relationship to the teaching
that we have chosen as our path. Is my way the right way and the
other the wrong way? If one is confident of one's path, it is my
belief that there is no need to put down other's people's choices. If
you do so, you are defining yourself by what you are against and that
will take away from the energy needed to really throw oneself into
one's own path.
I beleive mistakes have been made in some traditions in the way the
original teaching have been interpretted. I guess where I part
company with Dorian (if I understand her position correctly) and some
others is that I don't equate the religous institutions necessarily
with what the teaching is. For example, if someone can show my the
Jesus Christ made sexist and misogynist statements, I'd like to see
it. I certainly do part company with fundamentalists who beleive
everything in the Bible literally. I beleive this is a big mistake
and that all teachings are mere pointers to something inside
ourselves. So if we take them too literally, we fall into hell and
suffering (right here on earth) becuase no we polarize ourselves in
those that agree with me and those that disagree with me. By the way,
If Dorian and the authors she quotes used the term Religious
Institutions I would agree 100% (or close to) with what is being said.
I really love and appreciate the tradition I'm involved with but I
hope I never mistake the teaching for the "absolute truth". That must
be discovered and experienced for myself. There is a Zen saying, "If
you see the Buddha on the road, kill him." Heresy!?! No, it means
don't mistake my finger pointing at the moon for the moon.
So, how can we support each other's lives right here and now no matter
what our paths are, what are opinions are, etc? That, I think, is the
interesting question.
john
|
997.33 | one of my favorite quotes | TINCUP::KOLBE | The dilettante debutante | Wed Mar 07 1990 15:28 | 13 |
| "God exists. He/she/it just doesn't care about us." Lilly Tomlin
I like many of the Native American views on our relationship to the
land and the animals though I don't see it in quite the same light as
they do. I believe it is right to give thanks to the spirit of the
animal who died so that you can eat. I don't think it will make more
animals die willingly so that we may eat. I do think it gives us a
proper perspective of our place in the world.
Religions (as a whole) spring up to answer our fears. Our deities
address the problems we see in life. Each society rolls their own
and is in turn shaped by it. liesl
|
997.34 | | CSC32::M_VALENZA | Note in your birthday suit. | Wed Mar 07 1990 22:52 | 112 |
| Judith Plaskow has written an article for the March/April 1990 issue of
Tikkun Magazine, '"It is Not in Heaven": Feminism and Religious
Authority.' She offers some interesting insights, from a feminist
perspective, about the problems of religious authority and
religious individualism.
The article begins by stating:
The problem of authority plagues modern theology and ethics. Two
centuries of biblical criticism combined with increasing awareness
of the religious beliefs and practices of other peoples have
undermined the secure foundations of written and oral revelation on
which earlier thinkers grounded their philosophical reflections and
legal decisions. Biblical criticism reminds us that the religious
sources we look to for fundamental values are human creations, the
culture-bound expressions of past societies. Recognition of global
diversity weakens the claims of any specific tradition to divine
authority or eternal truth so that it becomes impossible for the
sophisticated modern to respond, as a student of one of my
colleagues did when asked to describe the difference between
parallel miracle stories in the Talmud and the New Testament, "the
one in the New Testament is true."
She then suggests that this recognition of the problem with religious
authority often creates problems because of the need in many for
religious certainty, as witnessed by the rise in fundamentalism. The
usual alternative to absolute religious authority that most defenders of
the faith pose is a morass of individual subjectivism. But she contends
that feminism offers another alternative, because it must confront the
problem of authority head on:
Religious feminism has benefited from and contributed to the
breakdown of traditional authority structures. Elizabeth Cady
Stanton's _The_Woman's_Bible_, a feminist commentary published at
the end of the nineteenth century, used the advent of biblical
criticism to radically question the religious authority of the
Bible, and in so doing set the tone for future generations of
feminist critics. Yet while feminists have helped undermine
biblical authority by pointing to the patriarchal origins and
development of so-called normative texts, they have also tried to
develop alternatives to patriarchal religion which are themselves in
need of some authoritative grounding. Whether a particular feminist
seeks to "prove" the fundamentally liberatory nature of her own
tradition or elaborate a new feminist spirituality, she still faces
the issue of secure foundations which no constructive thinker can
avoid.
Plaskow elaborates this point with several examples of feminist attempts
at recapturing a scriptural or normative basis for feminism (such as
identifying a "feminist" Jesus or a "nonsexist" Paul); but she argues
that this effort misses the point, because it looks for authority in the
wrong place:
Such attempts to ground feminism in Scripture, however, point to the
flaw in all attempts to base contemporary convictions on sure
biblical foundations: they disguise or deny the authority of the
reader. Since both feminists and antifeminists, democrats and
authoritarians, warmongers and peacemakers can ground themselves in
the Bible, surely it is not the Bible itself that tells us which
interpretation is final and true. The difficulty of articulating
even formal criteria that would be acceptable to all parties in a
dispute over the conflicting voices in Scriptures suggests that
whether or not the fact is acknowledged, authority must lie outside
the text and not within it.
The alternative, however, is not mere individual subjectivity. She
contends that the feminist perspective points to a *communal* basis for
religious authority:
The quest for feminist role models and authorities...emerges out of
a movement of women and men struggling for social and religious
transformation...The feminist case suggests, then, that religious
authority rests in a community of interpreters that--whether to
enhance its own power or give voice to the experience of a larger
community--seeks to understand texts and/or experience in ways that
give meaning and structure to human life.
More importantly, however, this is not just some idea that feminists
have invented out of the blue. She contends that religious authority
has *always* had this basis. Using Judaism as an example, she points
out:
When the rabbis said that rabbinic enactments and modes of
interpretation were given at Sinai, they were claiming authority for
their own community. When Kabbalists proposed that peshat and drash
are two important levels of a text, but that the mystical meaning is
the most fundamental and profound, they were claiming authority for
their community of interpreters.
This understanding is hardly comforting, however:
At least earlier interpreters, so we tell ourselves, *believed* that
their interpretations gave the true meaning of Scripture and thus
rooted the interpreters themselves in divine authority. Our
self-consciousness about the authority of a community, on the other
hand, leaves us all too aware of the precariousness of our moorings.
But this awareness can be constructive as well, in that it can be a
source of necessary social and religious change. Furthermore, religious
authority must be responsive to the ever changing needs of the religious
and human community:
There may be no way past communal authority into the mind of this
Eternal You that would allow us to anchor ourselves in the absolute.
But then even reaching for such foundation may entail an evasion of
responsibility. "It is not in heaven," the rabbis remind us.
We are to be our own authorities--not against God, not without God,
but also not in such a way that we dodge our responsibility to
create the structures of meaning we need to live our lives.
-- Mike
|
997.35 | | CSC32::M_VALENZA | Note to the Pixies. | Wed Mar 07 1990 23:14 | 11 |
| Speaking of religious authority, by the way, I am reminded of the lines
from the Echo and the Bunnymen song, "New Direction" (kind of an
appropriate reference for a topic named "A New Direction for
Feminism"):
You've learnt to speak and you're professing
the right to teach us our direction
but I found out on close inspection
true imperfection
-- Mike
|
997.36 | more from the article | GEMVAX::KOTTLER | | Thu Mar 08 1990 13:20 | 55 |
|
"If the creation of spiritually conscious communities has replaced frontal
assaults against patriarchy as the movement's priority, then 'healing' is
its second dominant theme. The foremost voices of the New Feminism are
those of nurses, midwives, women's health activists, and psychiatrists. It
is they who have treated the casualties from feminism's first wave.
"In one of the most important feminist psychiatric groups, five women based
at McLean Hospital and at Wellesley College's Stone Center have for nearly
10 years been debunking the theories of Freud and his followers. Trained to
accept the orthodoxy that psychological maturation is a process of
separation from others, increased autonomy, and the ability to assert
oneself in relationships to get one's needs met, these five clinicians
began in the mid-'70s to question the accuracy of this model, especially
for their female clients. Was it possible, they asked, that if they
dismantled the heavily proscriptive architecture of Western male theory,
women clients would reveal an entirely different inner landscape?
"For these psychiatrists, the answer, which has produced one book and
numerous papers to date, is yes. The central organizing principle of
women's being, they discovered, is not separation and isolated 'self-
actualization' but connection and relationships. Women, they say, draw
their strength, power, and self-esteem from deep and meaningful ties to
others. From childhood on, they argue, females strive to maintain and
fortify relationships with their mothers. As they age, they expand their
network through what these researchers have come to call empathic
relationships and through the skill of 'intersubjectivity,' the ability to
probe others' states of mind.
"Judith Jordan, director of McLean's Women's Studies Program and the member
of the group who coined the term 'intersubjectivity,' believes that the New
Feminist metaphor shift, from war to healing, is a significant one. 'The
old metaphor is, "We have to fight this battle and win this war." There's a
sense of hierarchy, dominance, defeat, and that's very much a male
metaphor,' she says. 'I think the female metaphor is one of caring and
taking care of, and the healing metaphor is very much a part of that. When
I think of healing, I don't think of it in terms of sickness or illness, I
think of it as "making whole" and coming...into a sense of wholeness-in-
connection.'
"As more and more women 'heal' - that is, free themselves from the
fragmenting values of the patriarchal worlds they have fought so hard, and
so successfully, to enter - Jordan believes that the work of social
transformation will occur. 'It's the place of my greatest hope, actually,'
she says.
"Even if successful in their chosen careers, Jordan believes, many women
suffer shame, anxiety, and low self-worth to the degree that they suppress
the aspects of self that the dominant culture devalues.
"The key to this feminist view of healing seems to be the ability to
listen, without judgment, to voices different from those one is accustomed
to hearing. Rather than attempt to silence or diminish those voices, the
empathic consciousness affirms and thus strengthens them, says Jordan."
|
997.37 | | ACESMK::CHELSEA | Mostly harmless. | Thu Mar 08 1990 15:51 | 18 |
| I think the thing that bothers me about feminist spirituality is that
it continues ascribing gender to certain qualities and I'm not
convinced that this is an accurate approach. For example, the concept
of women drawing strength from "deep and meaningful ties to others."
This sounds a lot like living one's life through others and I'm not
convinced that this is entirely a good thing. (I'm straight out of the
Moderate Enlightenment, so I resist heading too far in any one
direction.) It sounds, in fact, directly counter to what many women
have been trying to accomplish. Also, if women draw strength from
their connections to others, could it be that this is because they are
conditioned to do so? Is it necessarily attributable to being female
or is it caused by being *raised* a female?
Being a raging moderate, I like a combination of self-actualization and
connectivity. It *is* very satisfying to do things for others. (Yes,
I know I'm selfish, but I was involved with a number of "charitable"
projects in my high school church group, so I'm still attuned to the
joys of giving.) It is also very dangerous to think only of others.
|
997.38 | | CADSE::GLIDEWELL | Wow! It's The Abyss! | Mon Apr 16 1990 17:29 | 34 |
| > Note 997.36 by GEMVAX::KOTTLER >>>
Article text:
>"... The foremost voices of the New Feminism are those of nurses,
>midwives, women's health activists, and psychiatrists. It is they who
>have treated the casualties from feminism's first wave."
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Damn it! Doesn't that above paragraph make you want to weep?
Or hit someone? How dare some idiot write an article about "the New
Feminism" and tell us that
"psychiatrists ... have treated the casualties
from feminism's first wave."
Let's remember that feminism's first wave occurred before the
emergence of psychiatry.
>"In one of the most important feminist psychiatric groups, five women
>based at McLean Hospital and at Wellesley College's Stone Center have
>for nearly 10 years been debunking the theories of Freud and his
>followers.
Excuse my "imperialist warmonger" rhetoric, folks, but that "debunking
the thories of Freud" is such a male-centered view of a female-centered
effort that it makes me want to vomit.
This whole article makes me ill. I should remember that this article
is not scholarship. It is just a bunch of words slapped together by a
freelance writer who needs to make a buck. But even a freelancer
should practice a little basic logic and get an editor who can edit.
|
997.39 | recommended reading | DECWET::JWHITE | the company of intelligent women | Mon Apr 16 1990 19:19 | 5 |
|
might want to look at this past sunday's 'new york times magazine'
for an interesting look at where feminism has been and where it's
going.
|
997.40 | re: .38 | EGYPT::SMITH | Passionate committment/reasoned faith | Tue Apr 17 1990 11:57 | 3 |
| And Freud's theories have been being debunked on the same or similar
grounds for much longer than 10 years! Those women have not stumbled
on something new (based on the article, at least)!
|
997.41 | Margery Eagan - 4/17/90 | SALEM::KUPTON | Raphael,Donatello,Michaelangelo,Leonardo | Tue Apr 17 1990 14:15 | 95 |
| Bear with me. I'm no typist and will two finger this entire note.
Copied w/o permission from Margery Eagan , Boston Herald April 17,
1990.
HAVE YOU REALLY COME THAT LONG A WAY, BABY ?
Some observations on the state of womanhood 1990:
o The Miss Universe Pageant was on TV Sunday Night. Candidates paraded
around in that eggshell walk - the only way you can walk wearing
swimsuits and 4" heels. After each strut, judges assessed bustlines
(is it hers or silicone?), tautness of upper thighs (any sponginess
there?), gleam of teeth (is that nature or vaseline?).
The judges rated candidates from one to ten. And then, if you
can believe it, average ratings for each "girl" (there are no women
in paegant land) flashed in big numbers across her bare legs, as
if she were a Holstein in heat at a 4-H auction.
Miss Turkey, 19, explained how she wanted to help the handicapped.
Yeah, Yeah, Miss Turkey, we've heard it a million times before.
Her rating:7.139
Miss Chile, 22, took the eggshell strut one step beyond. She did
a sort of eroticiszed prance, pelvis in constant rotation. She looked
like Elvis. Dick Clark looked embarrassed. Extra points for
versatility. Miss Chile's rating: 8.410
Miss Norway, 20, the eventual winner, boldly declared that it
'is' possible after all for women to be fulfilled without motherhood.
Oh, those wild Norwegians. More important, Miss Norway's lips outpouted
Kim Bassinger's in "Batman". Her runaway rating: 8.927.
You know, to get to be Miss America, contestants have to go through
the mptions. Miss Idaho twirls her flaming baton. Miss Arkansas
dresses up in a red, white, and blue spangled micro-mini and recites
"The Battle Hymn of the Republic".
This is what I liked about Miss Universe Sunday: No pretense.
No one even pretends the show has anything to do with talent, brains,
personality, or Miss Norway's fervent desire to nurse the starving
children of Africa.
Miss Universe is just two hours of derrieres on parade. "Get a look
at the pair on Miss Bolivia!" Wowie, zowie. Thank you for that display
Miss Bolivia. A whopping 9.999 for you.
In these hypocritical times, Miss Universe debased and demeaned
women with refreshing honesty.
o Lest anyone conclude that women everywhere are into silicone
and stiletto heels, also one of those great big cover stories appeared
in the Sunday New York Times: Feminism: Who Says We Haven't Made
a Revolution?
And right there on the cover appeared one of the 1970s' premier
feminists, writer Kate Millet. Only Kate appeared with scraggly
gray hair to her waist and black shirt, black pants, and big black
leather boots that glistened from toe to knee.
Kate looked like a biker. A rhode Island State Tooper. An executioner
trainee. All she was missing was the ax. She looked frightening,
which is not supposed to matter, I know. But I have to wonder, is
this a conspiracy?
Why is it that every time big media outlets do their big updates
on feminism, they always feature pictures of big women trying to
look like beefy, humorless, Gestapoettes?
Maybe this has something to do with 21 year old being scared off
by "feminism" and turn to Miss Universe instead.
o Meanwhile, on middle-of-road womanhood, callers to WRKO yesterday
morning debated whether Barbara Bush is a worthy commencement speaker
at Wellesley College. One caller complained she's not a "Wellesley
woman", whatever that is, merely a wife and mother of five, the
lazy slug.
Observed co-host Ted O'brien, morning drive time's big liberal:
Maybe Wellesley would prefer as speaker, someone "who achieved on
her own rather than as an apendage to soemoen else." That is, her
husband George. Thus, Ted placed motherhood right back in the trash
barrell of achievements.
Maybe this is why today's children are in worse straits than ever:
Even big liberals think that just being mother is not worthy enough.
o Finally, from the marriage front, the other day I heard about
one woman's harrowing marriage counseling. She and her husband got
down to the nub; dredged up the buried resentments, angers, motives;
learned what the other truly thinks - and now they are getting
divorced. He refuses to confront his real feelings she said. ll
he evr wants to talk about is the Red Sox.
I know. Confronting real feelings has been the rage for 20 years.
But where's it getting us? Maybe what we need is less intimacy.
To start treating spouses like we'd treat a stranger: politely.
You know, vow never again to floss in front of him. Start saying
"Hello", when he comes in from work.
As for the Red Sox, maybe men are just different. Maybe if we
delved and found out what men truly want, it's just what they say
they want. To talk about the Red Sox.
Sorry for typos. I felt this was a thought initiating column
that should be shared. Only took me 40 minutes....8^)
Ken
|
997.42 | 2 steps forward, 1 step back | DECWET::JWHITE | the company of intelligent women | Tue Apr 17 1990 16:32 | 4 |
|
for what it's worth, i found the women on the cover of the sunday
new york times magazine to be quite beautiful.
|
997.43 | I went straight to the crossword puzzle | STAR::BECK | Paul Beck | Tue Apr 17 1990 17:31 | 1 |
| "EYECLASHES" indeed...
|
997.44 | i was stuck on that one... | DECWET::JWHITE | the company of intelligent women | Tue Apr 17 1990 17:44 | 3 |
|
thanks, paul!
|