The Earth is a Witch:
Ecofeminism, Deep Ecology, and the Pagan
Movement
By: Thomas H. Harbold
© 1994 by Thomas H. Harbold
This essay may be reproduced and redistributed
freely by electronic means (including via the Internet, computer bulletin
boards, and similar means) ONLY, and only provided that it is reproduced
in full, including this notice. One (1) hard-copy print-out may be made
for the personal use of individuals who possess an electronic copy. Use
of this document or any portion thereof for commercial purposes is specifically
excluded. Use in scholarly works, with proper citation, is permitted.
All other rights reserved.
Feminist Theology: Ecofeminism
Vanderbilt Divinity School
Professor McFague
The Earth Is A Witch.
Ecofeminism, Deep Ecology, and the Pagan Movement
Introduction
- In the Belly of the Goddess: Earthbody
as Sacred Body
- Earth-God Rising: Non-Patriarchal Images
of Masculinity for Earth-Healing
- Gaia's Voices: Paganism, Ecology, and Ecumenical
Dialogue
Concluding Thoughts
Appendices
- Myth, Metaphor,
and Reality: understanding the God/dess
- Deep Ecological
Principles and Positions
- Documents
of Pagan Belief
- Selected
Songs, Chants, and Poems
Works Cited and Bibliography,
with Annotations
Introduction
It is early evening, in mid-March, in Maryland. I am
sitting in my bedroom, gazing out my window at the melting patches of
snow which still cover large portions of the ground in these parts-and
at the horrible gashes cut into the breast of Earth-Mother by the bulldozers
of developers who have converted the beautiful fields, forest, and hedge-
rows behind my house into the site of a future subdivision. The sun has
just set behind the hill I call, privately, Cerne's Knoll, for the deer
I used to see there; now there are no deer, and precious few trees, left
of this formerly vibrant woods. I reflect that the developer responsible
is considered a pillar of his community-he sits on the board of trustees
of my undergraduate college-and his church. I think on the connection
between church and community: and on the at times chasmic dis-connection
between church and land-community, and between the traditional Christian
church and those who are not, whether by choice or happenstance, part
of it.
I do not think I am anti-Christian. I do not wish to
be. My grandfather was a Methodist minister; my family is, for the most
part, devout, and I spent a childhood remark ably free from the religion-related
traumas which have led so many to flee the church. But I am definitely
"anti" those aspects of conventional Christianity which strike
wedges between humans and non-human nature, between Christians and non-Christians,
between women and men. I recall being condemned to Hell, literally and
feelingly, by an Orthodox Christian on a computerized electronic mailing
list, for daring to suggest that Witches and other Pagans-some of whom
I have known and worked with for more than ten years, know to be honorable
and ethical persons, and some of whom I count among my closest friends-are
anything other than evil and depraved. I think of a friend of my parents,
telling them that he decided not to go to a Methodist church because he
heard the bishop was going to be preaching on environmental concerns;
he went to an Pentacostal church instead, heard a nice hellfire-and-damnation
sermon, "and that I could get into!" I reflect on an article
which recently appeared in the newspaper: an Anglican vicar of a parish
in the north of England, in opposition to the upcoming ordination of women
in the Church of England, stated that "priestesses should be burned
at the stake because they are assuming powers they have no right to."
Though the Church formally opposes his stance, it is hard to escape from
the spectre of two thousand years of Scripture and history which support
his vengeful vitriol. It is hard to escape the smoky stench of the Burning
Times lingering on his words.
And so I find myself at a point of personal crisis,
and it is out of that crisis that I write. It would not be difficult to
write a condemnation of Christianity; sadly, that faith has provided all
too much fuel for such a critique. My desire, rather, is to present alternatives:
not in the sense of evangelism, or seeking converts, not to suggest that
any one religious path is objectively "wrong" and another "right"
(and in this caution, already, I stray from the Christian tradition of
evangelism), but just that-to present alternatives. And not just any alternatives,
but alternatives which address the deep- seated alienation and structures
of dominance which exist in this world: men over and against women, (male)
humans over and against Nature, a transcendent and male- imaged God over
(and frequently against) humankind in our physical, sensory, Earth- related
context. Dominance and alienation are themes which are so closely interwoven
that one cannot fully understand, much less seek to correct, either one
without taking account of the other.
Recent decades have been a time of great change on
this Earth, our home; much of it, sadly, change for the worse. The forces
of ecosystem destruction-grounded as they are in patriarchal patterns
of dominance and in our overall alienation from our sense of place, and
from our non-human sisters and brothers who share this Earth-have gained
in force and in momentum. Pesticides and nuclear waste poison the earth.
Chemicals in the atmosphere punch holes in the ozone layer and greenhouse
gases threaten to initiate vast changes in our global climate. In sacred
and secular contexts alike, there is a palpable sense of impending doom,
a millenarian expectation which may take the form of capitalistic "grab
for all you can while you've still got the chance," Fundamentalist
promises of otherworldly paradise to replace this mortal world, if only
one will "repent" and be "saved," or the technotopian
drive upward and outward, to find a new world to replace this tired, worn-out
one.
A bleak picture? Yes. That cannot be denied, that the
peril is great. But so is the hope. In those same decades which have seen
such an acceleration of world-denying, even world-destroying, modes of
thought, being, and action, there has been as well a counter-movement,
an upwelling of world-affirming, life-affirming alternatives to the ethic
of domination, and the patterns of of alienation. This counter-movement
has taken many forms, including the most progressive wing of the Judeo-Christian
cultural- religious complex. But one of the most promising, most vibrant,
and fastest-growing of these alternative spiritualities and worldviews
is that known as the Neo-Pagan movement. "Pagan" is a word which
resonates strangely and perhaps fearfully to ears tuned by the cultural
constraints of 2000 years of Christianity, and it is important to define
this term-and related ones such as Wicca-before discussing how this move
ment may serve as one important path by which we may begin the process
of re- weaving the rifts which have been torn between humankind, Nature,
and God/dess.
"Pagan" derives from the Latin word paganus,
meaning "country-dweller," or less politely, "bumpkin."
As Christianity spread first in the cities, among the educated elite,
the country folk continued with their time-honored ways, and "pagan"
came to take on the meaning of "non-Christian." Neo-Pagan, or
"new Pagan," refers to that loose complex of newly emergent
and re-created folk religions which take their historical and spiritual
inspiration (and some of the forms and rituals used) from those aspects
of pre- Christian traditions most relevant to the modern world, and combine
them with contemporary creativity and inspiration in art, music, ritual
design, and thealogical studies. Neo-Pagan religions tend to be characterized
by an animistic, pantheistic, and frequently (but by no means always)
polytheistic approach to divinity; emphasis on the female aspect of deity
(the Goddess, the Great Mother, the Lady, or simply Gaia) as the primal
genetrix and ground of being, even when most traditions also work with
a balanced (female-male) polarity; deep veneration for the natural world
as the "body" of immanent Goddess; and an attitude of deep respect
toward women-as reflected in the number, and importance, of Pagan priestesses,
especially in Wicca.
Wicca, or Neo-Pagan Witchcraft (also known as "the
Craft" or "the Old Relig ion"), itself made up of a variety
of autonomous "traditions" (similar to denom inations in the
Christian Church, and just as fractious), is one of the largest and most
influential branches of the Neo-Pagan movement. Witches trace the descent
of their religion from the time of the Paleolithic "Lady of the Mammoths"
through the civilizations of the ancient Near East, and north to Greece
and the Celtic regions. Formerly, many claimed a direct and unbroken lineage
from the shamans of the Ice Age hunters and gatherers, through the priests
and priestesses of the planting cultures of the Ancient Near East, and
on via the pre-Christian religions of Europe and Asia Minor to medieval
days. Craft tradition holds that the religion survived even the conversion
of Europe to Christianity, and the "Burning Times" of the 15th-17th
centuries. At that point, some say, the ancestors of modern Wiccans went
underground; from this period sprung the concepts of the covens, Books
of Shadows (a combination ritual manual and magical/spiritual journal),
and many other features commonly associated with Witchcraft today. Neo-pagan
Witches firmly believe that the false confessions extracted under torture
during this time, combined with deliberate distortion on the part of ecclesiastical
authorities, are the source of most if not all of the modern misconceptions
many people have about the Craft.
In the last decade or so, however, an increasing number
of Witches have begun to question the factual truth of this story, while
continuing to value it for the mytho-poetic truth it contains. While what
we now know as Wicca may not have evolved in this specific way, in an
unbroken line, and especially not as the organized, universal religion
once claimed, Witches still feel that this interpretation of religio-magical
history retains validity due to the continuity of spirit it represents.
This view-mythic truth being seen as more important than factual, literal
truth-is common to almost all traditions of the Craft today.
Wicca emerged from myth into history in 1949 when Gerald
Gardner claimed to have found a coven in the New Forest in England which
was said to have been in existence since at least the 12th century. Whether
or not this was actually the case, interest in the Craft grew over the
next generation and new traditions were formed. Although the first covens
following Gardner were very formal, with strong links to ceremonial magic,
many contemporary covens-such as those which came into being after the
publication of Starhawk's The Spiral Dance in 1979-stress a mix of historical,
anthropological, and literary scholarship, creativity, and intuition to
develop rituals which are meaningful and relevant in the modern context.
The Wiccan world-view is a dualistic one, but rather
than Good-Evil, the duality is Male-Female. These are not seen as polar
opposites, but rather as complementary aspects, one of the other, somewhat
similar to the Eastern Yin-Yang concept. Most Witches believe in some
form of reincarnation or "transmigration of the soul," although
the specific understanding of this idea varies from tradition to tradition,
and even from Witch to Witch within a coven; in any case, the cycle of
birth, death, and rebirth is seen as something to be welcomed as an opportunity
for learning, even rejoiced in, not escaped from as in Eastern traditions.
There are two basic deities invoked in most Wiccan
traditions, the Great Goddess and the God, typically seen either as the
Horned One-a god who is analogous to Pan or the Celtic deity Cernunnos,
not the Christian "Devil"-or the Green Man. In some traditions,
the Goddess is considered to "rule" the summer months (from
Beltane to Samhain), and the God the winter half of the year, a distinction
reflecting, respectively, the planting and hunting seasons. Both Goddess
and God are often called by a variety of names based on European mythology,
depending on the tradition and specific ritual. More detail will be given
on the Goddess and God, and the ways in which these deity- concepts can
become powerful metaphors for synthesizing the insights of ecofeminism
and deep ecology, in Parts II
and III, below.
Wicca, and Paganism generally, provide a life-affirming
spiritual path to somewhere in excess of 100,000 Americans today, and
an unknown number of persons abroad. While not all Pagans-by any means-are
environmentalists, Paganism and Wicca do provide a spiritual opportunity
practically unique in the Western world: a religious path which places
a reverential attitude toward Nature (Gaia, Mother Earth) at the center,
not the periphery, of belief and practice. In addition, the centrality
of the immanent Goddess as primal genetrix and ground of being means that
Paganism, Wiccan and otherwise, is highly resistant to (though of course,
not proof against) the ethics and structures of patriarchal dominance
which are characteristic of Western, and much Eastern, religion. Paganism,
therefore, provides a vehicle, a model, a means of bringing together the
ecofeminist concern for structures of dominance, male over female, (male)
human over Nature, and the deep ecological concern for human aliena tion
from Nature, from the "land community" (Leopold, p. 240). This
is the great promise of Paganism, and this is the subject and premise
of my paper. I. In the Belly of the Goddess: Earthbody as Sacred Body
Starhawk states (Starhawk 1989, p. 10; Diamond &
Orenstein, p. 73) that the three "core principles" of Goddess
religion are immanence, interconnection, and community; Margot Adler (Adler
1986, pp. 24-5) characterizes Paganism as animistic, pantheistic, and
polytheistic. It is worth looking more closely at these assessments, and
at how they relate to each other and to ecofeminism and deep ecology.
Immanence, though given equal billing here with interconnection and community,
is the focus of much of Starhawk's work, and perhaps the one factor which
most distinguishes Paganism from the transcendent monotheism of the Judeo-Christian-Islamic
complex. Immanence means that godhead is not seen as "up" or
"out," transcendently above and beyond the world; rather, God/dess
is seen as present in the world, throughout the world, as close as a friend's
face, a leaf, the touch of the wind. Adler uses immanence, in fact, as
part of her definition of pantheism, commenting (p. 25) that "divinity
is inseparable from nature"; Starhawk comments (1989, p. 91) that
when asked if she believes in the Goddess, she responds, "do you
believe in rocks?" Adler (1986, p. 25) goes even further, however,
in asserting that Neo-Pagan groups participate in divinity. The widely-known
(within the Pagan community) saying of the Church of All Worlds, "Thou
art God/dess," makes this explicit in a way some may find problematic.
It is clear none theless that, in an immanent worldview, we are all living,
as it were, "in the belly of the Goddess."
Furthermore, many Pagans hold the ancient animistic
viewpoint, still held by indigenous cultures today, that everything which
is, is in some way alive-not merely as a result of being imbued with immanent
divinity, although that is part of it; but truly, individually, alive.
Such a worldview both pre-supposes and requires both interconnection and
relationship, or community. Goddess religion, Starhawk (1989, p. 11) points
out, is "lived in community"-community which includes "not
only people but also the animals, plants, soil, air and water and energy
systems that support our lives." This leads to a form of polytheism,
broadly defined, in which "reality (divine and otherwise) is multiple
and diverse," where "all nature is divinity and manifests itself
in myriad forms and delightful complexities" (Adler, p. 25). In this
way, Paganism has the potential to both embrace the ecofeminist concern
for particularity and relationship and the deep ecological desire to extend
one's "Self"-identity beyond the confines of merely personal
self-and then to go beyond them both: Paganism has the potential to revitalize,
re-animate, and above all re-sacralize the world.
While some ecofeminists are hesitant about utilizing
Goddess-imagery in speaking about the world of non-human as well as human
nature (see Merchant & King in Diamond & Orenstein), others, including
Starhawk, Eisler, and Spretnak, see the cojoining as empowering to women-and
potentially to humanity as a whole, as an antidote to millenia of patriarchal
domination. For these women, and those of whatever sex and gender who
think as they do, Goddess-centered religion breaks through the templates
of patriarchal myth and metaphor which reinforce patterns of domination
and suppression of women and nature alike.
Deep ecologists, on the other hand, have to my mind
drastically under-utilized the potential of Paganism and Goddess religion.
This is not a discussion of deep ecology in specific, but it is important
to briefly introduce the ways in which deep ecology can work in harmony
with ecofeminism and Paganism. Deep ecology presents not so much a new
way of "looking at" Nature as a new paradigm for humanity's
involvement in and relationship with Nature. Although deep ecology thus
far has looked primarily to Eastern traditions, such as Taoism and some
schools of Buddhism, and to a lesser (and problematic) extent the Native
American faiths, for its spiritual dimension, I believe that Paganism
can provide a more culturally appropriate Western path to this goal.
The central tenet of deep ecology is biocentric equality
in principle. This viewpoint is radically different from the traditional
worldview, dominant in today's mass culture, that the natural world is
little more than a gigantic resource base to support the human population,
and as such may be exploited freely for human ends. Even the reformist
Christian perspective expressed in the concept of "stewardship of
Creation" still places humanity in a paternalistic, "overseer"
position, at the top of the "Great Chain of Being"-although
it is a definite step forward over the traditional Christian view! Deep
ecology, in contrast, holds that all aspects of non-human Nature, from
other species and ecosystems to natural processes, have inherent or intrinsic
value or worth, aside from and beyond their value as commodities or resources
for human consumption.
To begin to appreciate the harmony possible between
Neo-Pagan spirituality and deep ecology concepts, consider this passage
from Deep Ecology:
Deep ecology is emerging as a way of developing a new
balance and harmony between individuals, communities and all of Nature.
It can potentially satisfy our deepest yearnings: faith and trust in our
most basic institutions; courage to take direct action; joyous confidence
to dance with the sensuous harmonies discovered through spontaneous, playful
intercourse with the rhythms of our bodies, the rhythms of flowing water,
changes in the weather and seasons, and the overall processes of life
on Earth Š This is the work we call cultivating ecological consciousness.
This process involves becoming more aware of the actuality of rocks, wolves,
trees, and rivers-the cultivation of the insight that everything is connected.
Cultivating ecological consciousness is a process of learning to appreciate
silence and solitude and rediscovering how to listen. It is learning how
to be more receptive, trusting, holistic in perception, and is grounded
in a vision of nonexploitive science and technology.
(Devall and Sessions, Deep Ecology, pp. 7-8)
Substitute "Paganism" for "deep ecology,"
and "developing a Pagan perspective" (or similar phrase) for
"cultivating ecological consciousness," and the connection between
these ways of becoming aware of and interacting with the world immediately
springs into sharp relief. Likewise, "becoming aware of the actuality
of rocks, wolves, trees, and rivers" seems highly apt for an ecofeminist
mode of honoring the particularity of other subjects. Ecofeminism, Paganism,
and deep ecology, properly understood, share a common concern for personal
experience, for praxis. Albeit with some differences of emphasis and manifestation,
the triple themes of immanence, interconnection, and community-of earthbody
as sacred body-run through them all.
It is well known that ecofeminists (see Kheel in Diamond
& Orenstein) frequently critique (primarily male) deep ecologists
for what they consider to be an excessive concern for the universal at
the expense of the particular. This critique is valid, so far as it goes,
but it falters when it goes beyond specific manifestations or expressions
of the movement or of individuals within it to become a critique of deep
ecology as such. Yes, deep ecology does have a tendency to emphasize connection
and interrelation among the varied members of the biotic or ecosystemic
community-what Aldo Leopold called the "land community" (Leopold,
p. 240). But anyone who has read Leopold's seminal A Sand County Almanac
will recognize that his appreciation for the land community as a whole
stems from close, personal awareness of particularity within it, built
over decades of fieldwork-Kheel's critique of the hunting ethic notwithstanding.
Similarly, Bill Devall, in Simple In Means, Rich in Ends: Practicing Deep
Ecology (1988) makes a point of emphasizing concrete, particular examples
in his outline of a deep-ecologically based praxis. Deep ecology's emphasis
is on connection and interrelation, specifically contrasted both to the
"minimal self" characteristic of the population at large in
Western society today and to the "oceanic self" characteristic
of the (usually male) mystic (Devall 1988, pp. 40, 48). Development of
the ecological self is the goal of deep ecology, and as Devall states
categorically (p. 46) that any awareness of "organic wholeness"
is possible only after personal, relational identification with that which
is immediate and tangible: the particular precedes the universal, and
the universal is predicated upon the particular.
This process may occur in a number of ways, but one
of the most notable in deep ecological theory and praxis is the development
of bioregional consciousness (Devall and Sessions, pp. 21-28; Devall,
pp. 57-69). In this process, one comes to know intimately the particular
place in which one resides and in the process comes to develop an identification
with that place and its inhabitants. It should be noted that identification
is not synonymous with identicality! One may identify oneself as human
without failing to recognize other humans as individuals; in the same
way, one may identify oneself as a member of a biotic or ecosystemic community-or
the bio/ecosphere as a whole- without necessarily succumbing to "oceanic
feelings of oneness" with the place, a stance which leads to abstraction
and, thus, to even greater separation in the long run. I believe the sense
of closeness to specific beings-trees, animals, herbaceous plant species-and
more general categories, such as water and wind patterns, found in a bioregional
consciousness to be congruent with both ecofeminist particularity and
relationship and Pagan interconnection-in-community.
To such a degree as the ecofeminist critique is accurate,
however, it still fails to take into account the differences between female
and male view of themselves and the cosmos. When ecofeminists claim that
male deep ecologists are overemphasizing the universal at the expense
of the particular, they may be failing to realize the extent to which
males have been taught, practically since birth, to see only in terms
of the partic ular-or more correctly, the separate. A sense of connection
between self and nature which is apparently almost a given for many women,
and a condition which some women see as something to be overcome or grown
beyond, is for many men all but unknown and something to be cherished
as an antidote to the feelings of separation and alienation which seem
very nearly our birthright. It is my belief that balance is the key in
this situation, but men and women may find themselves moving in different-and
perhaps seemingly opposed-directions in their quest for this balance.
A second ecofeminist critique of deep ecology, that
it fails to take into account the extent to which human domination and
exploitation of nature is linked to male domina tion and exploitation
of women, is an argument which, in my view, must be conceded. Deep ecology
has not taken sufficient account of this dynamic. But it could be argued
that this is, at least in part, because this is not the issue deep ecology
was formulated to address; ecofeminism was formulated to address this
issue, and is doing so splendidly. Deep ecology, on the other hand, came
into being to address issues not of domination per se but of alienation,
of which domination is an important, but not necessarily the sole, component.
Deep ecology and ecofeminism alike, then, are limited by their viewpoints,
a limitation which the addition of a Pagan perspective might go some way
toward alleviating. A Pagan critique of both deep ecology and ecofeminism
might go something like this:
Both deep ecology and ecofeminism have identified important
aspects of the root problem; that is, the crisis currently facing our
planetary environment-including the human environment and even the noosphere,
as de Chardin phrased it (Berry, p. 22). They have identified facets of
this crisis, but not its ultimate root (a Pagan critique might run), which
is the total de-sacralization of both human and non-human nature. Although
this process may have begun, as some hold, with the arrival of the militant
sky-gods of the Indo-Europeans millenia ago (Eisler, in Diamond &
Orenstein, pp. 28- 29), there can be no question that it accelerated markedly
with the advent of Christianity. In antiquity, as Toynbee phrased it,
"godhead was diffused throughout the phenomenon"; with the coming
of Christianity, "the divinity was drained out of nature and was
concentrated in one unique transcendent God" (Adler, p. 18). The
process accelerated yet again under the impetus of the so-called "Enlightenment"
and first the Agricultural, then the Industrial, revolutions. Starhawk
comments (1982, pp. 205-6) that both the Old Order, the feudal aristocracy
and allied Catholic Church, and the New Order, the largely Protestant
professional-commercial classes, "located God, as the source of true
value, outside the living world." She notes, however, that at least
the Old Order was based on an organic model-the human body (p. 189)-and
that its close ties to the land connected it with the cycles of nature
in a way that the urban professional class was rapidly losing. The rise
of mechanistic science, supported theologically by Deism and intellectually
by an increasingly secularized philosophy, dealt a near-deadly blow to
human awareness of immanence.
A Pagan critique might suggest that a reawakening of
human awareness to immanence could present both a model and a means for
restoring balance to the areas of both ecofeminist and deep ecological
concern. It is able to do so precisely because of how this immanence is
conceived: the figure of the Goddess provides an image and model of empowerment
for feminists struggling against the wholly-transcendent, male- oriented
models of divinity so prevalent in Western theological speculation; and
while deep ecology does tend to have a vague and rather abstract sense
of immanence, Paganism focuses this semi-intuitive sense on the concrete,
though symbolic, mytho- poetic imagery of the Goddess, and her specific
manifestations in and through the things of sensory, material nature.
There is a saying in the Pagan community: "it
is all real, it is all metaphor, there is always more." Paganism
is short on doctrine, but long on myth, metaphor, and poetry: with its
grounding in a multiple and diverse perception of divine reality, it is
resistant to the sorts of "one, true, and only way-ism" characteristic
of the monotheistic, transcendent Western religions. What are some of
the symbols and mythic images in which the immanence of the Goddess is
represented and embodied? As its very name suggests, Neo-Paganism is a
religion at once both old and new. Thus it is not at all shy about borrowing
myths and symbols from the Pagan past-though it may rework them in ways
that might not have occurred to the originators. This is not the place
for an in- depth study of the myriad faces of the Goddess, but it is worth
looking at some of the ways in which the immanent Goddess is portrayed
or perceived by Wiccans and other Pagans.
It is, perhaps, too broad a statement to suggest that
Wicca provides a "typical" view of Paganism, but since Witches
appear to form a majority of Pagans today, at least in the U.S., and since
many who are now involved in other forms of Paganism entered the movement
through Wicca, it seems most appropriate to take a closer look at the
two typical manifestations/embodiments of the Wiccan Goddess, the Great
Mother and the Triple Goddess symbolized by the phases of the moon. These
are not mutually exclusive; rather, they are complimentary, two ways of
looking at the same divine reality. Witches, and Pagans generally, prefer
images of birth and evolution over images of creation as being more organic
and alive, less mechanistic and structural. Thus, the Great Mother is
she who is eternally giving birth to the glorious multiplicity of human
and non-human beings: we are not the result of a potter's work with clay,
with spirits later breathed into us, but rather we are brought to birth,
body and spirit together. In this aspect she is identified with the Earth,
the only planet which we know for certain is capable of bringing forth
life, making this a particularly important aspect for those- including
deep ecologists and ecofeminists-who are concerned with the future of
our common home. But she is also the Star Goddess, the Queen of Heaven
(Starhawk 1989, p. 92), bringing forth not only trees, wolves, fungi and
individual human beings, but also planets, stars, and galaxies. The Great
Goddess is more than primal genetrix, however; one insight Paganism shares
with ecology, be it "deep" or feminist, is that death and decay
is also a part-a vital part-of the cycle of life. Death sets limits: just
as unmitigated death is annihilation, so unmitigated life is cancer (a
state toward which, deep ecologists argue, the human race is well on the
way, if indeed we are not there already). So the Great Mother is also
the Sow Who eats her young; she is the womb which becomes the tomb, as
in the megalithic passage graves of western Europe (Gimbutas, pp. 151-4).
Thus is the cycle of life, its dynamic ebb and flow, preserved.
It is just this flow and ebb which is represented in
the Triple Goddess of the lunar cycles. It hs long been noted that "women's
fertility cycles are closely tied to lunar cycles, and these in turn are
linked to the measuring of seasonal cycles for the favorable planting
and harvesting of crops" (Keller, p. 45), an identification which
is both ancient and intuitive. In Wicca, and other branches of Paganism
using a similar mythic struc ture, these lunar cycles represent not inconstancy
or mutability in a negative sense, but rather the dynamic cycles of life,
death, and rebirth. The waxing crescent is the Maiden Goddess; she represents
youthful vigor and playfulness, but more than that untamed freedom, and
erotic desire-which can embrace far more than sexual desire, although
that is definitively included. The full moon represents the Mother, Lady
of fruition and nurturance, whose aspect overlaps with that of the Great
Mother discussed above. The waning crescent, and in particular the dark
moon, is the aspect of the ancient Crone: the Wise Woman of hidden wisdom,
and of the death which leads to rebirth; she is both mourner and midwife.
Every phase of a woman's life is honored in Paganism, and every phase
in the cycle of all life.
Note that these are concrete images, embodied, not
abstract; if they are anthropo morphic (or occasionally zoomorphic), they
are also cosmic. Unlike, for example, mystical Christianity, in which
the theoretical goal is "pure" contemplation of a God- essence
totally divorced not only from gender (despite persistent male imagery)
and anthropomorphism but from all contact with the physical/sensory world,
Paganism embraces the language of the senses, and of metaphor. This is
characteristic of Paganism: the use of mythic imagery in the guise of
everyday things-the moon, a sow, subterranean passages, and others even
more mundane-to metaphorically point the way toward that which is deeper
than everyday reality, but which also contains and is contained by that
reality. II. Earth-God Rising: non-patriarchal images of masculinity for
Earth-healing
Goddess monotheism comprises a significant stream within
the Craft, particularly among the Dianic tradition, while some other Pagans
emphasize the Goddess almost, or completely, to the exclusion of the male
principle. This is especially common among women who have come to Wicca
or other forms of Paganism as a result of pyscho- emotionally traumatic
experiences with patriarchal religion; for them, Goddess monotheism, whether
seen as myth, metaphor, or objective reality, is a therapeutic experience
to set against the dominance of a strongly male God. Other Pagans, particularly
those working to reconstruct particular traditions such as the Celtic,
Norse/Germanic, or Greco-Roman paths, are radically polytheist, attributing
objective, personal identity to the various deities of the numerous pantheons.
The mainstream position in Wicca, however-insofar as it is possible to
make such a generalization-is for a balanced polarity which allows humans
to experience and internalize, through myth and metaphor, the ecstatic
dance of union of the "female" (Goddess) and "male"
(God) energies.
Any acknowledgement of a male god-principle may be
questioned by some feminists, who may view it as a potential or actual
return to patriarchal modes of religion. But the God as conceived by Pagans
is a far cry from the authoritarian "Lord of the Heavens," Lawmaker
and Judge, of the Judeo-Christian-Islamic complex. To begin with, he is
thoroughly embodied: in his less anthropomorphic aspects, he is seen as
stag or stallion, bull or boar. As the Hornèd Lord of the Hunt-success
at which could be a matter of life and death to our hunter-gatherer forbears,
especially in the cold season when nothing grows-he is both hunter and
hunted: he who takes life, and he whose life is taken. As the Green Man
of agriculture, he is the Dying God, the grain cut down in the fall to
rest in the womb-tomb of the Mother and rise again in the spring, the
vine which withers in the cold and returns, lush and green, as the weather
warms. It has been suggested over and over that one reason for Christianity's
success in converting Europe (force of arms aside) is that the people
saw, in the Christ-figure, just another aspect of a well-known archetype.
The Green Man aspect/archetype is one which deserves
a more in-depth treatment, for he is not only the most obviously "ecological"
of the God's aspects, but is one which continued to survive long after
the Christianization of Europe, even making his way into Christian churches
and cathedrals. Furthermore, the image of the Green Man has caught the
imagination of the contemporary public in a way few other Pagan survivals
or revivals have done-at least as yet. Like the Goddess, and like Paganism
itself, the Green Man is a figure who is both new and old. He typically
takes the form of either a foliate mask, a male face whose features are
formed of leaves, or else a male head disgorging vegetation from his mouth,
and perhaps nose and ears as well (Anderson, p. 14). He is linked, however,
to such legendary figures as Robin Hood and the Green Knight, and may
be linked as well as to much older archetypal forms in antiquity and even
pre-history, although the lines of descent can no longer be traced with
certainty.
The Green Man can be indicative of wild nature, cultivation,
or both; Toynbee's assertion of pre-Christian religion, that "divinity
was inherent in all natural phenomena, including those that man [sic]
had tamed and domesticated" (Adler, p. 18) continued into the Christian
Gothic in the person of the Green Man carved on cathedral column- capitals
and vaulting-bosses. Anderson comments of a triple Green Man head found
in Chartres cathedral that the "Green Man of the oak is the Green
Man of the forest while the Green Man of the vine is the Green Man of
agriculture"; the central, acanthus-leaf mask "signifies the
plants that cross the boundaries of farm and wild land, the herbs that
flavor, heal, or poison" (p. 86). Thus, the leafy face of the Green
Man is seen as thoroughly embodied in the Goddess' immanent presence throughout
the world: he is both symbol and embodiment of her own fructifying bounty,
and furthermore he is an image of male strength, of "power-from-within,"
which flows from connection with the Earth, not separation. The Green
Man represents an image of maleness which knows its place in the natural
order of things-just as do the plants and trees whose leaves he bears.
Not self-effacing or falsely deprecating, but yet totally lacking in the
kind of over- arching hubris which can and has become characteristic of
male power based on the image of a unique, transcendent, omnipotent God,
the Green Man is a potent image for an ecological age.
Anderson (pp. 40-43) also links the Green Man with
the Celtic Cernunnos, a god whose name means Horned One, another of the
manifestations of the God in Pagan (especially Wiccan) practice. Cernunnos
is a god of animal life, and of the hunt, and as such-in a time when "all
that most of us hunt for on a regular basis is a parking space"-the
value of such an image may be questioned by some. This is, nonetheless,
a powerful and potentially helpful image: the Hunter reminds us that life
must always feed on life, no matter whether animal or vegetable. Anyone
with any knowledge of traditional hunting cultures (not the weekend sport-hunters
which come to mind when most contemporary Americans think of hunting)
also knows the tremendous respect for and connection with the prey animal
felt by the hunters: the personhood of that animal is deeply valued, and
its sacrifice revered. The Horned God of the Hunt, representing both Hunter
and Hunted, provides a means of connecting-not only with the life which
feeds our life-but also with a past era in which the connections between
human and non-human nature were lived, not merely speculated upon. Tom
Brown (1983, p. 145) points out that there is a responsibility in the
taking of any life. To pull up a plant by its roots for no good reason
is the same as wantonly killing an animal. But it is only natural to feel
a greater burden in taking the life of an animalŠ they are constant
reminders of our dependence on other life.
The Lord of the Hunt reminds us of this constant interplay,
of life feeding on life, in a way that more "genteel" God-images
fail to do; he is valuable to modern humans precisely for his strangeness,
and the challenge he presents.
This challenge may take many forms, for the Hunt is
more than just the search for physical sustenance: as Starhawk points
out (p. 113), the Hunt is also the Quest-which may involve limited, well-defined
goals, or may be broad, open-ended, and lifelong- and so the God of the
Hunt is also the Guide on the Quest. There are, of course, Hunter- Goddesses,
of which Diana/Artemis is only the best-known; the Hunt, whether for meat
or vision, is by no means a male prerogative-nor should the "gender"
of the Goddess and God be taken too literally as reflecting human biological
sexual or gender roles. Yet it is clear that he who guides the human spirit
on its quest for fulfillment is a wholly different model for male god-energy
than a God who holds all the answers, and who dispenses them from "on
high" to those who please him through obedience to his decrees, or
through sometimes unreasoning faith.
The Hunt, on these terms, represents the acquisition
of power-from-within which comes about through self-examination, self-challenge,
self-discipline-not through buying into a "plan of salvation"
which is granted or imposed from without. Our focus, then, shifts from
transcendent otherworldliness, with its attendant ecological dangers of
devaluation of this world, to the spirit of a quest within the human and
natural worlds. This does not exclude, in fact it encourages, the possibility
of reality being far broader and deeper than the world of the physical
senses, or even the rational mind; still, the quest-from its inception
to its completion-is a thoroughly embodied one. The Lord of the Hunt does
not draw us out of the world, but rather calls us to synthesis between
the material and spiritual.
The Pagan god can also help to heal relationships between
women and men, for he takes his being from the Goddess: born from her
as ground of being, he is her Son; joining with her in the never-ending
dance of union he is her Lover who becomes her Consort. Again, the parallels
with the Christian story of Mary, the mother of Jesus who becomes his
bride, are surely more than coincidental-though the two traditions interpret
a markedly similar story in dramatically different ways. In some traditios,
the God is his own father, joining with the Goddess in erotic union at
Beltane (May Day), dying in Autumn, and being reborn as the infant Sun
Child at the Winter Solstice; in others, the god-essence is perceived
as twin brothers, God of the Waxing Year and God of the Waning Year, who
succeed one another eternally as the Wheel of the Year turns.
The Wheel of the Year, as Pagans refer to the perpetual
dance of the seasons, is closely linked to the God in his solar aspect
as the moon-phases are to the Goddess; it is another image worth exploring
in the context of ecological awareness. That we, despite our carefully
controlled climates and insulated existence, are still closely attuned
to the changes of season-psychologically and physically, if not emotionally
and ritually-is clear in academic institutions from the onset of "spring
fever" as the light lengthens and the weather warms. More negatively,
"Seasonal Affective Disorder" is becoming a medically recognized
term for extreme forms of the ennui and depression many of us feel in
the colder, darker months of the year. The eight "sabbats,"
or feast- days, used by Witches and many other Pagans, are drawn from
both Celtic and Norse/Germanic sources, and both symbolize and embody
significant moments in the seasonal round. Samhain (sah-wen or sow-an),
which lent its date and much of its symbolism to Halloween, was the Celtic
"New Year," and also the start of winter; it was and is a time
of introspection and spiritual disciplines-a time when humans direct their
attention inward, as the sap is drawn inward to the root of plants and
trees. Its opposite, Beltane, falls on May Day and is both the start of
summer and a celebration of life in all its physicality-including sexuality.
The ancients posited a close link between fertility and virility of humans
and the fertility of the land, living out in their bodies a close connection
to the natural world that most contemporary Westerners (including a majority
of Pagans, if truth be known) have long since lost. The other "Cross-Quarter"
Festivals, Imbolc (mentioned earlier in this work) and Lammas also reflect
important moments in the relationship of humanity to the non-human world:
the first signs of new life in the spring and the first harvest of the
Earth's fruits in the fall, respectively. The Solstices and Equinoxes,
which comprise the so-called "lesser" sabbats, have less direct
connection to the agricultural year, but a great deal to do with the quality
of light- which scientists are beginning to discover has quite as much
effect on humans as it does on supposedly more "primitive" organisms.
Celebration of these feast days can serve to help us connect, not onlywith
the cultural traditions of our ancestors (those of us who are of European
descent), but with the cycles of the natural world around us.
That this is not only of ecological, but of psychological
benefit seems all too clear. Within my own experience, the drear of winter
is easier to bear when it can be taken in stages, Samhain to Solstice,
to Imbolc, until finally the Equinox and spring arrive together. This
understanding of the Wheel of the Year, the seasonal cycle, provides another
way to connect our own lives to the life-cycle of birds, trees, plants
and animals around us. Even after the (at least nominal) Christianization
of Europe, the cycle of the Church year provided some vestige of this
understanding, as is not surprising in the agrarian culture which then
existed. Unfortunately (from a Pagan perspective), the twin forces of
Protestantism-which condemned many of the traditional Church festivals
(many thoroughly Pagan at the core, with only a veneer of Christianity)
as "superstition"-and the Agricultural and Industrial Revolutions
combined to destroy the mutually-nourishing phenomena of the seasonal
festivals and the sense of connection to the land they both reinforced
and embodied. When Neo-Pagans dance around the Beltane fires, or decorate
a Lammas altar with grain and vegetables, they are not merely play-acting.
They are making connections: both with ancient and timeless traditions
(though often in new and creative ways), and with archetypal imagery within
their own psyches, and with the sacredness of the Earth and all nature.
When Pagans celebrate the festivals of the Wheel, they are also re-enacting
the joyous, erotic union of opposites which drives all life: the Sacred
Marriage of Goddess and God.
The Pagan God, whether Horned One of the Hunt or Green
Man of agriculture, teaches balance and connection in ways that the unique,
transcendent God of the Judeo- Christian-Islamic cultural complex all
too frequently does not. In no case does he possess the attributes of
patriarchal authority of a YHWH or an Allah. But that he is not "God-the-Father,"
seen as the distant cosmic disciplinarian, does not exclude the possibility
of aspects of "god-as-father." A Witch of my acquaintance has
referred to him as "God the Plumber," who fixes things that
are broken, while Starhawk mentions a friend of hers as calling on "He
Who Changes Dirty Diapers, or He Who Makes Up Silly Games, or He Who Teaches
Through Play" (Starhawk 1989, p. 233). Thus the Pagan God provides
a model of nurturing which is all too rare in the dominant religious paradigm.
Ecofeminism teaches us that human domination of the Earth is inextricably
linked with male domination of women. Paganism teaches us that male models
of godhood which dominate neither women nor Nature are not only possible,
but extant, waiting for us to recognize and celebrate them. III. Gaia's
Voices: Paganism, Ecology, and Ecumenical Dialogue
I hope that I've succeeded in demonstrating, in the
above sections, that Paganism provides a viable spiritual path through
which to overcome the barriers between women and men, and between human
and non-human Nature. But Pagans are also uniquely positioned to speak
for the Earth: to be, in effect, "Gaia's voices." They may do
so in the same ways as non-Pagans, naturally, through recycling, supporting
environmental organizations, letter-writing, or more direct action such
as that performed by Greenpeace or Earth First!. It has long been my own
view (along with that of many, though not all, in the Pagan community)
that those who call themselves Pagan, who claim to honor the Goddess and
revere the "total biosphere of Holy Mother Earth," have a particular
obligation to live in ways that tread as lightly as possible on the Earth.
But there are Pagans who are taking much greater and
more visible steps in this direction, raising their voices in public and
political forums on the local, national, and even international level.
The most dramatic example of this was last fall's second Parliament of
the World's Religions, held once per century, in Chicago. Witches from
several traditions, along with Goddess worshippers from the Fellowship
of Isis, the Druids of Ár nDraiochte Fein, and representatives
of the Church of All Worlds were invited to attend. The Covenant of the
Goddess, a Wiccan "umbrella" organization which is federally
incorporated as a church, was among the co-sponsors. Although the Greek
Orthodox Christian Host Committee pulled out to protest the inclusion
of "pseudo-religious pagan groups that profess no belief in a God
or Supreme Being"-a statement resulting in much bemusement on the
part of the Pagan groups in question- response from other Christian and
non-Christian groups seems to have been overwhelmingly positive. Witches
and other Pagans from COG, Circle, EarthSpirit Community, and other groups
not only sat on interfaith panels but also led or moderated several, maintained
a hospitality suite-which was well-attended and became a major networking
center-and operated informational booths. They gave a variety of workshops
on Pagan topics; several were so well-attended that they had to be moved
to larger rooms, and even then people were turned away at the doors for
lack of space!
COG, with EarthSpirit Community, held a major Full
Moon ritual in Chicago's Grant Park, attended by some 500 (mostly non-Pagan)
Parliament and media representatives. This ritual, reported as "moving,"
"impressive," and "fun" by those who attended, was
also a remarkable example of interfaith cooperation. Originally denied
a permit by the city, the Pagan contingent was granted one at the last
moment: partially due to well-focussed media attention, but partially
due also to the intervention of both the ACLU and-somewhat surprisingly-the
Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Chicago. Admittedly, Cardinal Archbishop
Berrigan may have been feeling some pressure by that point, but pressure
need not necessarily lead to obligation. The fact that he felt moved to
intervene at all on behalf of Pagans says a lot about the "coming
of age" of the Pagan movement among the world's religions-as does,
of course, being invited to the Parliament in the first place.
One of the outcomes of the 2nd Parliament of the World's
Religions was the "Declaration of a Global Ethic," a document
recognizing our collective culpability for the current state of our Mother
Earth, and calling for "respect for the community of living beingsŠ
and for the preservation of the Earth." The Rev. Deborah Light, a
Wiccan priestess who holds her clergy credentials from COG, was among
the signatories of this declaration-parts of which have a distinctly Pagan
"feel" to them. She signed on behalf of the specific organizations
she represented and "all other Pagans now and forever," inscribing
a pentacle and the words "so mote it be!" below her signature.
This historic second Parliament, which Andras Corban
Arthen called "the coming-out party for Pagans and Witches into the
community of the world's religions," was clearly a time of enlightenment
for Pagans and non-Pagans alike. One may hope that it will be only the
first of many occasions for visible and productive discussion, compassion,
understanding, and cooperation between Pagans, Christians, and members
of other world religions. Whatever the future may hold, there is a ring
of truth to the banner carried by ADF's Isaac Bonewits, Archdruid and
Parliament representative:
THE GODDESS:
YOU WILL NEVER BE ABLE TO IGNORE HER AGAIN!
Concluding Thoughts
I hope I have succeeded in articulating what I feel
to be some of the great strengths and tremendous potentialities of the
Pagan movement. But given that balance is one of the great Pagan virtues,
I would be ethically as well as factually untrue to the movement if I
were not to concede that it is far from perfect.
Pagan theology (or thealogy) is still a relatively
new phenomenon, and although there have been a few forays into the field
of theological ethics, they remain as yet few and far between. The Pagan
view of "sin" (though rarely called by that name) as resulting
in consequences and not punishment is, for many Pagans, extremely positive
and affirming. These consequences are taken seriously by most Pagans;
the "Wiccan Rede," to which many non-Wiccan Pagans also subscribe,
states simply, "An ye harm none, do as ye will." However, combine
the lack of divine retribution with the common belief in reincarnation,
and there is unquestionably an "I'll worry about that in the next
life" tendency among certain Pagans. This is true despite the so-called
"Law of Karma," which states that "what you send returns
to you"-according to some versions threefold-in this life. M. Brian
Patrick, a Christian minister strongly sympathetic to the Pagan path which
he walked himself for several years, comments,
A significant minority of those who call themselves
Witches or Pagans seem to be using this authentic spiritual path as license
for living in a blatantly adolescent manner: especially through irresponsible
and addictive behavior regarding sex, drugs, food, alcohol, and relationships.
Subtle self-deception, denial, and dishonesty seem widespread. This is
particularly tragic because it affects the large number of Pagans and
Witches who operate with a high degree of integrity and self-discipline.
(Patrick, in FireHeart No. 5, 1990, p. 16)
He goes on to add that "another factor affecting
Paganism's 'Earth-witness' is a subtle form on anti-intellectualism."
As a reaction against the rather arid intellect ualism and mechanistic
objectivism of the contemporary scientific-academic establishment, and
an attempt to reclaim more intuitive and holistic modes of thought, this
is understandable and even healthy to a degree. Unfortunately, some Pagans
do carry this to the extreme of strongly distrusting those who act or
write in an intellectual or academic mode; I have seen this myself in
the pages of Pagan books and journals, and in the actions and attitudes
of Witches and other Pagans I have known. I have also, I hasten to add,
known Pagans of the most rigorous academic and personal standards. Still,
there is a fair amount of "fluff" circulating under the guise
of serious scholarship in the Pagan community: a fact which seems particularly
sad and ironic in a movement which, justifiably, questions the often anti-intellectual
stance of traditional Christianity. It does not strike me as helpful to
replace one form of this malaise with another!
If the sort of scathing critique recounted above came
from someone hostile to Paganism, it might be tempting to dismiss it as
irrational, vindictive, or simply stemming from lack of understanding.
But coming as it does from someone with demonstrated sympathy to Paganism,
it deserves to be taken with utmost seriousness, as should the comments
of Chrys Thorsen, Director of the American Buddhist Congress, who in the
Winter 1993-4 Green Egg (p. 27) suggests that "many Pagans are still
in that militant mode that is a normal part of 'coming out,' an early
phase that should be matured pastŠ" This is, again, somewhat
understandable; but the critique is on-target, I feel, in addressing those
who are unable or unwilling to progress beyond this stage. I have, again,
seen this myself; Paganism is not a religion which most people-within
it or without-are yet able to take for granted: its followers tend to
either remain "in the broom-closet," or, if they "come
out," to do so in often flambouyant and sometimes antagonistic ways-a
reaction not entirely dissimilar to that of some gays, radical feminists,
and members of other self-aware oppressed or marginalized groups. Yohalem
(FireHeart No. 7, pp. 79) points out both the similarities and differences
between the "coming out" experience of gays and that of Witches
and other Pagans, and although the differences must not be downplayed,
the parallels are rather striking.
Still, these are stages in the development in what
is a very new, as well as very old, religion; they need not become traps
unless Pagans themselves allow them to. If Pagans can find the self-disciplineto
work around or grow beyond those elements (adolescent- style rebellion,
anti-intellectualism) which detract from the internal and public credibility
of the movement, Paganism may become a means not only for providing common
ground between ecofeminists and deep ecologists, but for beginning to
heal the still-gaping rifts between God/dess/the sacred, non-human nature,
and humankind. Earth-witness in the Pagan context, in which Witches and
other Pagans take up the role of "Gaia's voices," is not only
appropriate, it may be essential. No other Western religion or religious
complex has reverence for the Earth, for nature, at the very core of its
worldview and practice; perhaps no other religion or religious complex
of any kind already contains within it or is able to so easily embrace
the insights of both deep ecologists and ecofeminists. To quote Patrick
again (pp. 15-16):
I believe that future generations will some day see
that the supreme religious irony of our times was this: that those who
claimed to be followers of Jesus Christ crucified Paganism (both in Europe
and North America), and at the "appointed time" Paganism was
resurrected from the dead, bringing with it the gift of new life for all,
the salvation of our worldŠ The world needs conscientious Witches
to guide the human community back home. The planet needs Pagans of integrity
who will be midwives to the birth of a mutually enhancing Earth-human
relationshipŠ This is an awesome calling and destiny.
It was mid-March when I began this paper; it is mid-April,
now, as I finish it. The Maryland snows have given way to Tennessee rains,
the freezing temperatures to floods, both here and in the Midwest. The
Wheel of the Year turns, and floods, lightning storms, and tornadoes remind
us that humans, for all our knowledge and puissance, are not-yet-the most
powerful forces on this planet. I choose to take that as a positive sign.
As I look out my tenth-floor apartment window at the lights of streets
and buildings, and hear the whoosh of cars driving past, I also smell
the faint but soul- nourishing scent of wet earth, and new grass: the
earth somehow still contriving, despite the damage even now being wrought
by human greed or simple thoughtlessness, to renew itself. While the grass
grows and the rains fall, there is hope. Our responsibility is neither
to tame the earth and subdue it to our will, nor yet to imagine in our
pride that we can "save" it. Our job, it seems to me, is to
learn to walk lightly upon our homeworld-our ecological mother as surely
as the woman who bore us was our biological mother-and to live, so far
as we may, in a symbiotic relationship, human to human, human to non-human,
human and non-human alike to God/dess. Paganism is not the savior of the
world, but it may serve as an important strand in the web of life. Perhaps,
at this stage in humanity's development, that is all that can asked.
Back
to the menu
Works Cited and Bibliography,
with Annotations
Adler, Margot: Drawing Down the Moon: Witches, Druids,
Goddess-Worshippers, and other Pagans in America Today (revised and expanded
edition). Boston: Beacon Press (1986). This is unquestionable the best
overall survey of the modern Neo-Pagan movement, although only through
1986.
Anderson, William: Green Man: the Archetype of our
Oneness with the Earth. San Francisco: HarperCollins, 1990. Discusses
the Green Man archetype as he has appeared since pre-Christian times up
to the present. Extremelywell-illustrated with excellent color and black-and-white
photographs by Clive Hicks.
Berry, Thomas: The Dream of the Earth. Sierra Club
Books (1990). One of a new breed of "geologians"; though coming
from the Christian tradition, his "new cosmology" is deeply
ecumenical and his style almost poetic.
Brown, Tom Jr.: Tom Brown's Field Guide to Living With
the Earth. New York: The Berkeley Publishing Group (1984). One of an extensive
series of "Field Guides" to various aspects of living in close
contact with nature as a way of life. Emphasizes long-term living, close
to the Earth.
Brown, Tom Jr.: Tom Brown's Field Guide to Wilderness
Survival. New York: The Berkeley Publishing Group (1985). Concentrates
more on short-term practicalities of survival, but without ignoring the
spiritual side.
Campanelli, Pauline: Ancient Ways: Reclaiming Pagan
Traditions. St. Paul: Llewellyn Publications, 1991. This and its sister
volume, Wheel of the Year (1989), are thoughtful, "homey" discussions
of "kitchen witchery," with lots of fairly accurate historical
information.
Devall, Bill: Simple in Means, Rich in Ends: Practicing
Deep Ecology. Salt Lake City: Peregrine Smith Publishers, 1988. A well-thought-out
and useful discussion of deep ecology as praxis, with plenty of concrete
examples.
Devall, Bill and George Sessions: Deep Ecology: Living
as if Nature Mattered. Layton, UT: Gibbs Smith, Publisher (1985). The
theory of which Simple in Means, Rich in Ends is the practice.
Eisler, Riane: "The Gaia Tradition and the Partnership
Future: An Ecofeminist Manifesto," Reweaving the World: the Emergence
of Ecofeminism, Irene Diamond and Gloria Feman Orenstein, eds. San Francisco:
Sierra Club Books, (1990). One of a collection of essays on ecofeminist
themes; follows MarijaGimbutas' assessment of Old Europe as peaceful and
matrifocal, and portrays this era of peace and plenty as a model for contemporary
practice.
Fox, Selena: "1993 Parliament of the World's Religions,"
Deborah Ann Light, "Assembly Representative Report," and Alice
Cascorbi, "Some Parliament Impressions," Circle Network News:
Nature Spirituality Quarterly Volume 15, No. 4. Mt. Horeb, WI: Circle
(1993). First-hand reports on the Parliament from Pagan participants,
including a signatory of the "Declaration of a Global Ethic."
Gimbutas, Marija: Goddesses and Gods of Old Europe:
Myths and Cult Images (new and updated edition). Berkeley: University
of California Press (1982). Survey of Old Europe as a peaceful, matrifocal,
Goddess-oriented agrarian culture, as portrayed in its artifacts.
Gimbutas, Marija: The Language of the Goddess. New
York: HarperCollins (1989). Continuation of and expansion on the themes
of the above work.
Gundarsson, Kveldulf: Teutonic Religion: Folk Beliefs
and Practices of the Northern Tradition. St. Paul, MN: Llewellyn Publications
(1993). A manual for Norse/Germanic reconstructionism, but coming from
a strong scholarly stance.
Hutton, Ronald: The Pagan Religions of the Ancient
British Isles: Their Nature and Legacy. Cambridge: Blackwell Publishers
(1991). Something in the nature of a sympathetic debunking of some popularly-held
misconceptions of ancient British religion, combined with a great deal
of historical and archaeological data.
Judith, Anodea and Melissa Ellen Penn: "Riding
the Great Wheel: A Report on the World Parliament of Religions,"
Green Egg Vol. XXVI, No. 103. Ukiah, CA: Church of All Worlds (Winter
1993-4). An account from a CAW perspective.
Keller, Mara Lynn: "The Eleusinian Mysteries,"
Reweaving the World: the Emergence of Ecofeminism , Irene Diamond and
Gloria Feman Orenstein, eds. San Francisco: Sierra Club Books, (1990).
Contemporary ecofeminist perspective of one of the best-known gynocentric
traditions of the ancient world.
Kheel, Marti: "Ecofeminism and Deep Ecology: Reflections
on Identity and Difference," Reweaving the World.
Leopold, Aldo: "The Land Ethic," A Sand County
Almanac. New York: Ballantine Books, 1966. Deeply ecological before deep
ecology existed, this is a classic.
MacCrossan, Tadhg: The Sacred Cauldron: Secrets of
the Druids. St. Paul, MN: Llewellyn Publications (1991). A rather scholarly
manual for Celtic reconstructionists, only slightly marred by MacCrossan's
strongly expressed views.
Patrick, M. Brian: "Pagan-Christian Connections,"
FireHeart No. 5. Maynard, MA: Earthspirit Community (1990). Wonderful
article exploring the possibilities for true ecumenical dialogue between
these traditions. Russo, Vinnie with Sarah Stockwell and Michael Thorn:
"Three Perspectives on the Parliament of the World's Religions,"
Tides: A Journal of Wiccan and Neo- Pagan Spirituality,
Volume 2, No. 1. Boston: Tides (1993). Additional first-hand accounts
of the second Parliament, held in Chicago.
Spretnak, Charlene: "Earthbody and Personal Body
as Sacred," Ecofeminism and the Sacred, Carol Adams, ed. New York:
Continuum Publishing Co. (1993). Very comprehensive and well-written discussion
of the "Old Religion"/Gaianspirituality from an ecofeminist
perspective.
Starhawk: Dreaming the Dark: Magic, Sex, and Politics.
Boston: Beacon Press, 1982. Notes on ritual, small-group process, non-violent
resisting; the Appendix on the social history of the Burning Times is
worth the price of the book.
Starhawk: The Spiral Dance: A Rebirth of the Ancient
Religion of the Great Goddess. San Francisco: HarperCollins, 1989. Probably
the most influential single volume in the rebirth of the Pagan movement.
Starhawk: Truth or Dare: Encounters with Power, Authority,
and Mystery. SanFrancisco: Harper & Row, 1987. Picks up where Dreaming
the Dark left off, andthen goes deeper. The Starhawk article in Diamond
& Orenstein is an amazing condensation of the basic premises of this
book.
Thorson, Chrys: "An Open Letter to the Pagan Community,"
Green Egg Vol. XXVI, No. 103. Ukiah, CA: Church of All Worlds (Winter
1993-4).
Yohalem, John: "Coming Out: A Magical Rite of
Passage," FireHeart No. 7. Maynard, MA: Earthspirit Community (1993).
Subtitled "Magical Initiation and the Experience of a Non-magical
Minority," reflects on similarities and differences in "coming
out" between Pagans and gays (Pagan or otherwise).
From:
http://www.spiralnature.com/spirituality/paganism/earthwitch.html
Last modified:
20-07-01
© Copyright 2000-2001 CE Webmaster
Back
to the menu
|