Dr. A.’s talk is called “The Steward Asks the Question”
Mythology offers intrinsic cyclic opportunities to reconnect, reassess, and recreate our personal, cultural, and global narratives. To accept this eternal invitation to re-creation and rebirth we must begin with the acknowledgement of our place in the natural world. If life as we know it is to survive, humanity must revision itself as one-of-the-many, as a steward, and not overlord of life on Earth. In 2020, increasing extreme weather events and the pandemic gave us a taste of where life out-of-balance is leading. It has also given us a chance to look within and realign our priorities. Mythology was born of human experience and our need for meaning-making amidst the eternal cycles of birth-life-death and rebirth. Myth can lead us into accord with universal principles of life. Myth can lead to the healing of the wasteland, if we ask the right questions. The first question must be, what is our place in the natural world?
About Dr. A.
Dr. A. is a cultural mythologist, women’s mentor and coach, speaker, and writer. Andrea received her Ph.D. from Pacifica Graduate Institute. She is the creator of The Midlife Re-Boot! Method, a program developed to guide women to recreate themselves and rediscover their true north at midlife. Her work engages with the current re-emergence of the archetypal feminine, at a time when nature and the earth, themselves symbols, metaphors, and embodiments of the sacred feminine, are under existential threat from climate change. Dr. A. has been a featured workshop facilitator and speaker at women’s events and the College of the Canyons Women’s Empowerment Conference and the Popular Culture, American Academy of Religions, Women in Mythology, and the Mythologium conferences. Dr. A’s mission is to guide, consult, and mentor women to fulfill their potential and become their most authentic selves in service to themselves and others.
Brandon’s presentation is called “The Myth of Peace and Conflict Done Well”
Drawing a direct line from a Ph.D. in Mythological Studies to his diversity and restorative justice work in Oakland, CA, Brandon Williamscraig shares the story of accepting the invitation to introduce his research and internationally funded Peace Practices curriculum as a research coordinator and instructor in the Somatic Psychology department at Pacifica Graduate Institute. Direct experience and research make clear that mythic and archetypal literacy are both central to whole system healing and essential to the specific kind of somatic, fully embodied process of legitimate suffering, grief, and recovery that is our survival challenge as a species. To illustrate this, Brandon will introduce participants to a process that moves from the archetypal to the culturally specific by way of mythological study. Discerning core tensions in specific cultural complexes, as well as specific conflicts that result in trauma and a need for healing, the group will receive examples of working through/by way of conflict in order to create responses and practice somatic exercises tuned to address injustice and restore balance. That process, repeated over time, results in healing and power sharing that works through difference. This is the practice of Conflict Done Well, without which bodies politic, and especially their most marginalized members, are profoundly vulnerable to authoritarianism and other deep wounds to the world soul, or Anima Mundi.
Brandon Williamscraig, Ph.D. was co-founder and CEO of the San Francisco Bay Area nonprofit Association Building Community, or ABC. He served as a post-doctoral fellow, fieldwork supervisor, and instructor for all levels of graduate students at Pacifica Graduate Institute in the Depth Psychology Somatics Specialization. He holds an international 5th degree black belt in aikido and has founded learning communities and served as chief instructor. He has extensive experience with private and public institutions, offers leadership, diversity, and facilitation training, and has worked in the study of peace and conflict since 1998 while providing curriculum development, conflict education, and mediation services. His teaching and research focus on the embodied (somatic) psychology of belief, the narrative/mythological construction of culture, and The Myth of Peace.
Jen’s presentation is called “The Shape of Water: Restoring Ecological Consciousness”
Despite the scientific evidence that we are in an environmental crisis, many people have not significantly changed their behavior. This suggests that the crisis cannot be addressed simply through rational arguments and logical means. There is something deeper at play, something powerful in the unconscious level of the collective. Jeffrey Kiehl argued that the “fundamental psychological roots” of the crisis need to be uncovered to solve the problem.
Myth and fairy tales provide a direct route to the unconscious aspects of the collective and can help to identify a path of transformation. One recent fairy-tale film provides insights into the environmental challenges that we are facing. Guillermo del Toro’s, The Shape of Water, brings to life Richard Tarnas’s two “suitors” who demonstrate different ways that we can relate to the world around us. One will keep us on our path of destruction. The other, exemplified through the main character, princess Elisa, provides a new way of relating to the world and transforming our current ecological crisis. Through Elisa’s relationship with the mysterious sea creature, we find an image for a new ecological myth.
This presentation builds on my paper published in the journal of Ecopsychology, March 2019.
Jen Degnan Smith, Ph.D. in Archetypal and Jungian Psychology, explores sociocultural issues, particularly those where psychology and economics merge. Her 20-year career in organizational consulting and university teaching spans the US and Europe, and her Ph.D. dissertation examined the modern Greek Economic Crisis through a mythological lens. She is focused on healing and empowering the feminine within individuals and the collective.
Kayden’s presentation is called “Rewilding the Cultural Imagination to an Ecological Consciousness”
In The Great Derangement, writer Amitav Ghosh suggests our current climate crisis stems from a crisis of culture and cultural imagination. This lack of imagination furthers our disconnection from the natural world and justifies exploiting ecosystems. As depth psychologists and mythologists have discovered, consciousness deepens and heals by engaging the mythic imagination. Our refusal to embrace myths, what James Hillman calls our soul stories, keeps us in a state of denial with our archetypal reality which our current environmental situations reflect. The mythologies of Dionysus and Artemis in particular can contribute to a healing of this disconnection by way of rewilding and cultivating an ecological consciousness. Both Greek mythic figures offer an entry into the universal archetypes of wilderness, the communal cultivation of the vine and the wild feminine essential to reclaiming our relationship with nature and the wild. A Dionysian and Artemisian consciousness are explored as one way into the ecological consciousness and ecological thinking that is resisted in our current cultural expression. “Seeing through” the ensouled world in this way changes our relationship with the nonhuman and expands our own human ecology to include the world we live in.
Kayden Baker-McInnis is a PhD candidate in Mythological Studies with an Emphasis in Depth Psychology working on an ecological dissertation focusing on the Greek figure Dionysus in relation to nature, body, and gender. She teaches language arts to school-aged students and offers adult myth classes. Her workshops include a humanities-based writing process engaging comparative mythology, cultural studies, and depth psychology in Salt Lake City.
Craig’s presentation is called “Storied Nature: When Myths Heal the Split Between Us and Everything Else”
Stories tell us who and where we are. Myths are, among other things, stories that tell us how to relate wisely to the natural world. When we ignore the myths, we tend to relive them darkly, as when oil spills igniting rivers inadvertently but powerfully recall Phlegethon, the fiery river from Greek mythology. Myths from many lands contain warnings and wisdoms for how to live as one species among many.
My presentation will address the following questions:
– How do fossil fuels bring with them the mythology of the Underworld gone crazy?
– What myths do psychologies detached from nature tend to reenact?
– What do the old tales tell us about the consequences of losing alignment with the rules of nature?
– What do they tell us about healing the split in consciousness that opens when we consider ourselves masters of the natural world?
– What does the research methodology Terrapsychological Inquiry offer for healing our relations with Earth as a living animate presence?
Craig Chalquist, Ph.D. is core faculty at the California Institute of Integral Studies and former Associate Provost of Pacifica Graduate Institute. His books include Myths Among Us (World Soul Books, 2018) and Terrapsychological Inquiry: Restorying Our Relationships with Nature, Place, and Planet (Routledge, 2020). Visit his website Worldrede.com.
Dante’s presentation is called, “Japanese Folklore’s ‘The Eight-Hundred Years Buddhist Priestess’: Exploring the ‘Gift of Immortality’ in Japanese-Style Animations and Games”
Japanese folklore’s “The Eight-Hundred Years Buddhist Priestess,” featuring the accidental consumption of a ningyo (Japanese mermaid), has been less well-known than equivalent tales in other ancient mythologies (Nicolae, 2020). Despite bringing this tale to life via Japanese-style modern entertainment, it is still less globally recognized due to the cultural and geographical distance (Sever, 2016). This theoretical and qualitative research fills previous studies’ gaps by investigating how this tale depicted the two most significant Japanese media: Japanese anime (animations) and video games. A Qualitative Meta-analysis Review (QMR) was applied to comprehensively investigate the origins of how movie and game directors developed their contents inspired by this mystical tale (Levitt, 2018). The results indicated that anime reflected the positive side of this myth, specifically the potentials of immortality, while video games portrayed its dark truth. Anime such as ‘Lu over the wall’ reflected human’s curiosity about the Earth’s uncharted corners or a caring relationship between the distinct species as described in the anime ‘Ponyo'(Okuyama, 2015). Meanwhile, video games demonstrated the punishments brought by obsessing with ‘eternal life’ (Dumas, 2018), particularly the Corrupted Monk in ‘Sekiro: Shadows Die Twice’or the eternal curse of famine at the Hanuda village in ‘Forbidden Siren.’ These research outcomes contributed significantly to world mythology and encouraged entertainment creators to consider implementing Japanese mythology into their exclusive content.
Quan Dieu ‘Dante’ Luong holds a bachelor’s degree in English Studies at Hoa Sen University (Vietnam). He has participated in numerous research activities that enriched teaching methodologies and learning materials for English Language Teaching. As a result, Dante’s achievements and contributions are widely recognized by his supervisors, professors, and colleagues.
In 2018, he arrived at Concordia University Chicago to pursue his Master’s degree in Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages (TESOL). After graduating, he performed his internship at the Vietnamese Association of Illinois (VAI), where he developed lesson plans and scheduled English and citizenship courses for Vietnamese immigrants. His interest in mythology originated from his childhood dream of becoming a myth hunter, bringing forgotten tales and myths into the modern world, and motivating people to explore and preserve them. After spending his time reading books, watching films, and doing independent research on myths and legends, he realized their essence and influence on human psychology and inspiration. Implementing old tales to develop new ones is the aspect that fascinates him.
In 2020, he experienced the pain of losing his loved ones due to illness and the COVID pandemic. Attending this year’s Mythologium, Dante looks forward to sharing these unforgettable moments, along with his future ambitions in the field of mythology, with fellow professors and conference audiences here.
Lucy’s talk is called “Greek Goddess Archetypal Healing”
Have you ever wondered how the Greek goddesses can personally heal you? In “Greek Goddess Archetypal Healing,” we’ll explore the strengths and weaknesses of seven of the most well-known Greek goddesses: Aphrodite, Artemis, Athena, Demeter, Hera, Hestia, and Persephone. Each goddess, corresponding to an area of a woman’s life, can empower you to transform your life into one of mythic proportions.
About Lucy
Lucy Smith (Moore College of Art & Design B.F.A. Illustration ’16, Delaware College of Art & Design A.F.A. Illustration ’13, West Chester University B.A. Theatre ’11 cum laude) is the lady behind Persephone’s Jewels, a life coaching experience of self-esteem building and identity exploration through the lens of the Greek goddesses. She maintains a popular face painting business, Colorful Kingdom Entertainment; models, and babysits dogs. In her spare time, Lucy studies astrology, tarot, and life drawing.
Nicola’s talk is called “To Heal a Selkie: Immerse in Ancestral Waters”
Irish mythology is often rooted in the ancestral realm either by name or form. The ancestors play a key role in identifying the protagonist’s lineage and the momentum of the journey. In the Celtic Selkie mythology, when her soul was drier than an old discarded bone, the Selkie seized a fortuitous moment and fled. She ran and did not stop until she was back with her clan. Healing began with her return to the ancestral waters. Mythologies provide the reader with a symbolic map, which can be used as a guide throughout different stages of our personal quest. The symbols and geographical textures provide the reader with clues to the type of balm or action that facilitate the healing process. This presentation will utilize depth psychology, somatic studies, and science to access the healing wisdom in this enduring Irish myth. Ever present, the ancestors offer guidance for personal and collective healing. Can we heed their call?
About Nicola
Nicola Tannion, Ph.D. is an academic and spiritual teacher, writer, and bridge-builder with national and international experience. She has an innate ability to draw upon wisdom from the deep wells of the ancient ancestral mysteries, world mythologies, and the collective unconscious. She has taught Individual and Collective Grief at the undergraduate level (Antioch Seattle), presented at national and international conferences, and is a popular corporate speaker. Nicola is currently working with Cluster Arts, Australia’s leading Performing Arts Management Company.
Sara’s talk is called “Archetypal Voices Within the Body—Pre & Post Quarantine”
As a somatic practitioner during this unprecedented time of Covid, I have witnessed how the health of even my most extroverted clients has slowly shifted archetypally. In this time of imposed quarantine, psyche has taken the collective withdrawal and inhaled it into the bone and marrow of a quarantine that is self-imposed on a much deeper level. There has been a shift in the archetypes we were living pre-quarantine and those that have risen to the surface in an effort to save us within quarantine. We have been left unprepared for the forthcoming conditions of walking side by side and inhaling the breath and touch of another. This presentation explores how the archetypal lived experience has shifted and impacted the artist’s health during quarantine. Through the guidance of these archetypes I explore how we embrace them through open dialogue and consciously wash them through the body. In order to cross the threshold into a world post-quarantine the invitation is to greet who we were in order to understand who we are now. With our new boundaries consciously recognized we are better prepared to step into this new ecology of body/mind/spirit and earth.
About Sara
A somatic oriented educator, Sara Lovett is a writer, performer, and teacher whose work sits at the interface of depth psychology, somatics, and ritual. She holds a BFA in acting from The University of Texas at Austin, and an MA in Somatic Depth Psychology from Pacifica Graduate Institute where she is pursuing her doctorate. Her research question explores the effects of embodied practices in the self-care of the actor.
Using the self-landscaping process (an art based body-mapping modality), authentic movement and embodied writing, Sara works with artists on deepening their mind/body connection towards healthier physical and mental well-being. In preparation to cross over the threshold from Covid-19 seclusion into eventual emergence, her current classes explore the body in quarantine and its impact on our well-being and shifting perspectives. Sara’s lectures and workshops focus on the connection between mind, body, psyche, the relevance of dreams, the imagination, the power of image and the archetypal. She is the author of the memoir, The Invisible Bones, and the upcoming book, The Friendship Index.