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The Woman Who Married the Bear: The Spirituality of the Ancient Foremothers

Autor Barbara Alice Mann, Kaarina Kailo
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 26 feb 2024
Stories of the primordial woman who married a bear, appear in matriarchal traditions across the global North from Indigenous North America and Scandinavia to Russia and Korea. In The Woman Who Married the Bear, authors Barbara Alice Mann, a scholar of Indigenous American culture, and Kaarina Kailo, who specializes in the cultures of Northern Europe, join forces to examine these Woman-Bear stories, their common elements, and their meanings in the context of matriarchal culture.The authors reach back 35,000 years to tease out different threads of Indigenous Woman-Bear traditions, using the lens of bear spirituality to uncover the ancient matriarchies found in rock art, caves, ceremonies, rituals, and traditions. Across cultures, in the earliest known traditions, women and bears are shown to collaborate through star configurations and winter cave-dwelling, symbolized by the spring awakening from hibernation followed by the birth of “cubs.” By the Bronze Age, however, the story of the Woman-Bear marriage had changed: it had become a hunting tale, refocused on the male hunter.Throughout the book, Mann and Kailo offer interpretations of this earliest known Bear religion in both its original and its later forms. Together, they uncover the maternal cultural symbolism behind the bear marriage and the Original Instructions given by Bear to Woman on sustainable ecology and lifeways free of patriarchy and social stratification.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780197655429
ISBN-10: 0197655424
Pagini: 296
Ilustrații: 43 b/w illustrations
Dimensiuni: 226 x 163 x 41 mm
Greutate: 0.54 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States

Recenzii

This book provides access to a wealth of traditional knowledge about women, bears, and our relationship to the natural world. Presenting profound insights with a light touch that is thought-provoking rather than polemical, it illustrates how values prevalent in early matriarchal societies remain essential today, as we contemplate ecological disaster and social collapse. This is a jewel of a book.
The Woman who Married the Bear is a masterful work by two exemplary scholars. The great antiquity of their subject is indicated by its existence within Indigenous societies of North America, Scandinavia, the Baltics, Russia, Siberia, and beyond. The bear and the woman are mythic ancestors of sacred kinship within the great cycles of the living world, fostering the regeneration of life within human and animal realms, with urgent significance for today.
An extraordinary collaboration, this book excavates the trace hauntings of an almost lost cosmology, divinity, and rituals surrounding the figure of the Woman Who Married the Bear. The wide-ranging sources—ancient documents, cellular memories, and contemporary theories—challenge the hegemony of the Western patriarchal social imaginaries and recuperate the evidence of rich matri-centred cultures and their gift economies. A classic, welcome, highly recommended contribution to contemporary interdisciplinary scholarship.
This book includes photos and drawings that illustrate and support the research and arguments contained within thereby making the content more accessible.
In this ambitious work, authors Kailo and Mann compile evidence from the northernmost countries of Europe and the Americas to reconsider the enduring if currently distorted lore regarding the importance of bears to human existence.
Bear-woman marriage had to do with mutuality of survival between human and non-human persons when they shared caves and food. This volume is a much-needed wake up call to heal, to repair the interdependent relationship between humans and non-humans.
This volume is a much-needed wake up call to heal, to repair the interdependent relationship between humans and non-humans.

Notă biografică

Barbara Alice Mann is Professor of Humanities at the Jesup Scott Honors College of the University of Toledo, Ohio. She has published around 500 articles and chapters and fifteen books, including Spirits of Breath: The Twinned Cosmos of Indigenous America and Iroquoian Women: The Gantowisas.Kaarina Kailo previously served as Professor of Women's Studies at Oulu University, Finland; as Senior Scholar at the Finnish Academy; and in various positions at the Simone de Beauvoir Institute, Canada. She has published several books, anthologies, and hundreds of articles on the gift economy, ecofeminism/mythology, bear lore, women's folklore, and sauna healing. She is also the editor of Wo/men and Bears. The Gifts of Nature, Culture and Gender Revisited (2008).