Witches At Harvard

From The Harvard Gazette, May 10, 2007

Colloquium attracts scholars, witches

Students and practitioners of witchcraft mix it up at folklore and paganism conference

Harvard News Office

What does the word “witchcraft” mean to you?

If it’s Elizabeth Montgomery’s twitching nose or something some hapless woman in Colonial Salem was put to death for, you’ve got some catching up to do.

Witchcraft is very much of the present, a 21st century religion or philosophy or practice (exactly how to define it is a bit tricky) with plenty of passionate adherents as well as cadres of academics ardently scrutinizing its history, its sociological significance, and its beliefs.

The vitality of witchcraft (or Wicca, as many within the movement prefer to call it) was on display May 3-4 at a colloquium titled “Forging Folklore: Witches, Pagans, and Neo-Tribal Cultures,” sponsored by the Committee on Degrees in Folklore and Mythology.

According to Stephen Mitchell, professor of Scandinavian and folklore and chair of Folklore and Mythology, one of the reasons witchcraft, magic, and paganism fascinate scholars is that their study brings together so many different disciplines.

“Part of what makes the topic so intriguing,” Mitchell said, “is that its proper study is inherently interdisciplinary and calls on a highly discursive skill set. And it is an excellent example of how adjacent disciplines can learn from each other.”

At the Harvard colloquium, academics weren’t the only ones doing the learning, or teaching. Practitioners as well as scholars (and those who combined the two roles) were present in goodly numbers. Although there seemed to be some tensions between the two viewpoints, Mitchell sees the heterogeneity of the group as an advantage.

“What perhaps made this conference a little different was the fact that so many pagans and pagan academics attended, but that may be understood in part as a reflection that these [pagan] groups are among the fastest-growing religions in America today. After all, what would a conference on, say, Buddhism or Islam be that didn’t include people who could provide an ‘emic’ view of things?” (“Emic” is a description of behavior in terms meaningful to the actor as opposed to the observer.)

What was most striking about the colloquium was the variety of forms that witchcraft and paganism have taken and the variety of perspectives from which they have been observed.

On the more traditional side of the spectrum, for example, Matthieu Boyd, a Ph.D. candidate in Harvard’s Department of Celtic Languages and Literatures, discussed the survival of pagan themes and images in Breton folklore. In a very different vein, independent scholar Leslie Roth spoke about “Technopagans, Chaos Magicians, and Postmodern Narratives of the Occult,” while Lindsay Coleman of the University of Melbourne, Australia, discussed “The Faun as Father Surrogate in Guillermo del Toro’s ‘Pan’s Labyrinth.’”

Randy Conner of the California Institute of Integral Studies in San Francisco gave an impassioned defense of “Aradia, or the Gospel of the Witches,” an 1899 book by the American Charles Godfrey Leland, which claims to reflect an ancient witchcraft tradition practiced secretly in Tuscany, and which has become a fundamental text of modern Wicca. Conner accused those scholars who have tried to discredit the authenticity of “Aradia” of anti-pagan prejudice.

“If it’s not a medieval work, then it is a living vision of an alternative religion. Why are people so hell-bent to dismantle counter-hegemonic histories of paganism?”

Ronald Hutton of Bristol University in the United Kingdom delivered the keynote address, “Modern Pagan Festivals,” in which he traced the origins of the eight festivals that comprise the wheel of the modern pagan year. Hutton, who has written books on 16th and 17th century British history as well as on witchcraft, magic, and shamanism, argued that these festivals are not of ancient origin, as many of their celebrants claim, but can be traced back to relatively recent sources.

Interest in the pre-Christian religions of the British Isles began, Hutton said, in the mid-18th century when scholars began to study and to speculate about the ancient druids, then mistakenly believed to be the builders of Stonehenge and other megalithic monuments.

One of the most influential authorities was Edward Williams, a Welsh stonemason and antiquarian who called himself by the Welsh name Iolo Morganwg. Williams published large quantities of what he claimed were lost poems written by ancient Welsh bards but which have turned out to be forgeries.

According to Williams, the druids considered the four “quarter days” (corresponding to the solstices and the equinoxes) to be sacred and held religious festivals at these times.

Margaret Murray, a British Egyptologist of the late 19th and early 20th centuries who also wrote popular books on witchcraft, added the other four festivals, to which she gave the names Imbolc, Beltane, Lughnasadh, and Samhain. According to Hutton, Murray’s insistence that British witches held festivals on these dates is based on the slimmest of evidence.

The person who did the most to popularize the pagan Wheel of the Year as the centerpiece of modern Wicca, along with the notion that Wicca’s beliefs and rituals had survived in an unbroken line from ancient times, is Gerald Gardner. According to Hutton, however, many of the songs and liturgies Gardner introduced as ancient were actually taken from published sources while others were written by his associate Doreen Valiente.

Since Gardner’s death in 1964, other writers, including Aidan Kelly, Starhawk, and Vivianne and Christopher Crowley, have added to the accumulation of lore and belief that comprises modern Wicca.

According to Hutton, the most striking difference between ancient and modern paganism is the absence among moderns of the idea of sacrifice, of a lesser being trying to propitiate a more powerful one. Instead, modern pagans seek to cultivate a closer bond with the natural world and to cultivate hidden powers in themselves. In this sense, Hutton finds Wicca to be distinctly modern, despite its claims to antiquity.

“It lacks just those aspects of religion which modern critics of religion have found most unpalatable — namely, human weakness and helplessness.”

ken_gewertz@harvard.edu

To Neff and Zsen…and to old friends…

Some people you meet and you just know…

There will never be another friend, like this friend.

No one else can make you as angry or as happy.  No one else “gets” you.  No one else can get away with saying the kinds of things you’d let this person say. 

Certain people become a part of your insides.  And when they exit before you do, it’s hard not to spend the rest of your life wondering, “what would he/she have thought about this, done with this, said about this…”

You make your peace with things the older and wiser you get.  Memory becomes a blessing and a curse.

And life’s just life.  It’s exactly what you make of it.  And of old friends…

(The silliest people on earth, after midnight, Fairfax Village – Neff T’s last visit to LA, to shop with ZZZsssen!)

You are GOD

Love is the law.

The Crowley quotes that revolutionized occult thinking for Jimmy Page and countless other seekers of truth:

“Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the law.”

“Love is the law.  Love under will.” 

“Every man and every woman is a star.”

Love is patient…

The thirteen lines below are the only lines from the Christian bible that I have any use for.  It’s always amusing (and frightening) that most of the Christians I have met don’t seem to know it or heed it.  Funny. 

Ah well, it’s just poetry…


The Excellence of Love

If I speak with the tongues of men and of angels, but do not have love, I have become a noisy gong or a clanging cymbal.

If I have the gift of prophecy, and know all mysteries and all knowledge; and if I have all faith, so as to remove mountains, but do not have love, I am nothing.

And if I give all my possessions to feed the poor, and if I surrender my body to be burned, but do not have love, it profits me nothing.

Love is patient, love is kind and is not jealous; love does not brag and is not arrogant

Love does not act unbecomingly; it does not seek its own, is not provoked, does not take into account a wrong suffered

Love does not rejoice in unrighteousness, but rejoices with the truth;

Love bears all things, believes all things, hopes all things, endures all things.

Love never fails; but if there are gifts of prophecy, they will be done away; if there are tongues, they will cease; if there is knowledge, it will be done away.

For we know in part and we prophesy in part;

But when the perfect comes, the partial will be done away.

When I was a child, I used to speak like a child, think like a child, reason like a child; when I became a man, I did away with childish things.

For now we see in a mirror dimly, but then face to face; now I know in part, but then I will know fully just as I also have been fully known.

But now faith, hope, love, abide these three; but the greatest of these is love.


New American Standard Bible Copyright © 

For Nev in October, Full Moon Tomorrow…

I was thinking about Nev Tillak today, as I do every day.  Nev passed away October 31st, 2002.  Six years later, I all of a sudden need to write about it because Nev would have LOVED being blogged about. 

A friend wrote this one month ago.  Today, with the Full Moon coming, it seemed safe to re-read.

“I still think about that summer we all spent together. Do you remember when we all sat in Nev’s room and watched the film he made of all of us at the pool?  I remember he projected it on the wall next to his bed and played “Every Day is Like Sunday,” by Morrissey. I remember someone said, “it’s like we’re all dead…” Ironically, Nev was the only one not in the film. I love that song but still have a hard time listening to it. God, I am sooo melancholy today…full moon is coming… Be well my friend”

Here is what I wrote back:

“Nev used to come to LA for certain pop-culture must-sees like Coachella and The Smiths Convention.  And I always felt like his “beard” at these things because once he got there he would ditch me to go buy cool merchandise!!! Can you picture that??? 

SMITHS Convention in Pasadena. Nev gets ready ALL MORNING and is SO MAD that I am not ready yet. He said, “Jen’s cats are just like mama…stay up all night and sleep all day…”

We finally get there and it is PACKED!!! We wait in line and once inside the Pasadena Convention Center EVERYONE makes a mad rush for the middle where all the booths are. I begin to speak to Nev so we can PLAN our stroll around and he is GONE like a gunshot! I can see him disappearing like Buddha amongst the goth kids!!!!!!

Needless to say he turned up a few hours later, completely satisfied with his tshirt, magazine and vinyl purchases and ready to go!! With me driving of course :)   Later, I drive him all over the valley in search of Morrissey’s home. We also see Morrissey at the first Coachella. At night’s end, in the parking lot we begin arguing. I can’t remember the argument, just the resolution which sounded like this:
JH: “Nev, this is not even an issue anymore.”
NT: “Yes, Jenn, this is a non-issue!! A total NON-ISSUE!”
JH: “This was never an issue in the first place”
NT: “Right, Jen, this is a total fucking non-issue!”
This carries on until 2am as we drive back to LA and of course Nev HAS TO stop for fast food. “I’ll treat” he says.

To this day I have dreams that Nev and I have been talking and I wake up and it’s 5 AM and I realize that I have been crying in my sleep. Those are the times that I get that he is really gone and not just living in SF where I can’t see him this year but will see him next time. The no next time is the hardest part.”

Those whom we have loved and lost never really leave us.  They are in our hearts and minds forever.  Especially during the Full Moon and Autumn and on days that feel like Sundays…

Why I Don’t Blog About Sarah Palin

So the obvious question is, “If this is a Witch/Revolutionary site, then why aren’t you blogging about Sarah Palin”? 

My obvious answer to that is “Do I need to?  Isn’t she doing a wonderful job of scaring the hell out of us entirely as is?” 

What nuance of right wing stupidity could I illuminate that Sarah Palin doesn’t already convey every time she speaks publicly?  Dissecting Sarah Palin has become the national pasttime of all the Democrats anyway.  Fun times.  They love that shit.  And of course their camp doesn’t thrill me any more than Sarah Palin’s scares me. The Democrats and the Republicans have long been the same old boring party to me anyway.  Blah, blah, blah.  There is nothing fresh or innovative coming out of either parties mouths.  Again, we are stuck with the same boring “bail out the middle class” last minute patriotism that have made both parties seem completely penny wise and pound foolish to me. 

Besides, Witches deal with Sarah Palins on a daily basis!!  Always have and probably always will (at least in the US)!!!  We didn’t just wake up to this new American horror, we live with ignorance and prejudice and intolerance on a daily basis.  We don’t slumber on the cultural watch the way those lazy liberals seem to. 

For those of us who are inclined to believe that God and Goddess can be found in yourself, or perhaps does not exist at all, this is how the United States has always looked:

Homogenized.  Self-righteous.  Delusionally religious.  Hypocritical.  Dangerously conservative.  Completely void of innovative and progressive thought. Patriarchal women passing for feminists.  Scary.  24/7 Scary.

Come to think of it, that’s how I usually feel about the Democrats too!  Funny!

Long ago, those of us who were lucky enough to hear what Ralph Nader was proposing and who campaigned fervently for him and who endured the stupidities of those who were angered by Nader’s “spoiler” votes (please deliver me from the hubris and assumptions of the narcissistic Dems) shook our heads when we realized he wouldn’t get the debating time or attention that he deserved. 

I don’t need to say anything about Sarah Palin.  As stated earlier, she speaks for herself.  And for all those like-minded.  To those who woke up recently, to an ugly America in danger of fascism, I say “Where have you fucking been?  We could have used you in the Nader camp years ago…”

For those of us already mourning the loss of our sacred and cherished hope of giving Ralph Nader one more well deserved chance to intelligently CHALLENGE this corporate hegemony of bullshit that passes for a free nation’s government….well, all I can say is “FUCK IT!”  I now have to give my vote to the shitty middle class Dems who appear to be a lesser evil than the ruling class bible thumping Repubs.

To all the earnest Sarah Palin haters, who get off on daily dissections of her, I flap my paws for you.  This election has made me feel about as stimulated as a drunken seal, sluggishly congratulating the already self-congratulatory Dems for their wit: you guys are SOO MUCH SHARPER than those boring old Republican farts.

I hope that when Obama wins, people will blog about the great BAIT AND SWITCH or  ”what happened when Obama got elected and nothing improved”?????

We Witches are looking forward to seeing all the optimistic American children winning their great big Obama prize.  For many of us (we can already feel it on the winds), the next four years (of no lasting change) will be the last stop before flying out of this nest altogether and seeking higher ground, higher thinking in other, less narcissistic lands.

Renaissance Tarot: The Empress Card

Renaissance Tarot
The Empress

“The Empress holds a fan of worldly pleasure and the orb of sovereignty. Hera (Juno) and the peacock accompany her. The queen of the pagan gods gave the hundred eyes of the vanquished Argus to the foul to adorn its tail, and adopted the bird as her attribute. Later, Mary the Christian queen of heaven inherited the symbol of the peacock and its “eyes” became the all seeing eyes of providence.”

“The Renaissance Tarot is a modern deck, with symbolism drawn from the heroic age and rendered in renaissance style. This deck is an excellent choice for exploring questions of passion, mastery, and the inner workings of human reason”

What this card means in a reading: Feminine fertility and power. Civilization. Domestic tradition. Family and childrearing. The active, fecund aspect of the anima. The mother and the queen, on earth and in heaven.

Undoubtedly one of the more inspirational archetypes…

bell hooks on patriarchy, sexism and feminism

bell hooks!  bell hooks!  bell hooks!

Video credit: I WANT DEMOCRACY NOW