
Re-riting Woman: Dianic Wicca and the Feminine Divine (Pagan Studies): 5
Author(s): Kristy S. Coleman (Author)
- Publisher: AltaMira Press (UK)
- Publication Date: 28 Feb. 2009
- Language: English
- Print length: 268 pages
- ISBN-10: 9780759110021
- ISBN-13: 0759110026
Book Description
Thick description of seasonal rituals dispels fears and stereotypes about Wicca, and offers readers a comforting familiarity and shared healing. Coleman employs ritual theory to suggest why and how these rites wield such meaning-altering possibilities. Practitioners statements that describe a shift in worldview and self-conception elicit Colemans proposal that Dianic rituals re(w)rite the valuation and meaning of woman. Dianic womens stories reveal both the transformative power of the traditions practice and the organizations challenges related to power politics.
Editorial Reviews
Review
Re-riting Woman persuasively argues that changing language and ideas is not enough. Kristy Coleman evocatively describes the rituals of a women”s religious movement and provides an accessible discussion of the philosophy of Luce Irigaray. She shows the reader that the active celebration of women”s lives as sacred, valuable, and good in regular and transformative rites is both revolutionary and liberating. — Graham Harvey, The Open University
Scholars in gender studies, anthropology, religious studies, and other fields will gain valuable insight from Kristy Coleman’s detailed analysis of the Circle of Aradia Dianic Wiccans, its complex dynamics, and its beliefs. Her careful ethnography clearly explains Luce Irigaray’s challenging concept of the feminine divine. She reveals not only the woman-empowering, anti-patriarchal process of rituals such as Beltane, but the tension and transformation in the organization itself. — Dorothy D. Wills, California State Polytechnic University, Pomona
In this detailed and nuanced ethnographic study, Kristy S. Coleman guides her readers through French feminist theory to the lived experience of seasonal rituals in Dianic Witchcraft, exploring along the way both the potential and the constraints of a religion that has cast the divine as female. — Sarah Pike, California State University, Chico
An intriguing study of the convergence of American feminist Goddess spirituality and French feminist theory. — Carol P. Christ, author of Rebirth of the Goddess and She Who Changes
With Re-riting Woman, Kristy Coleman applies an Irigarayan lens to her study of a long-standing Dianic Wicca group, and the results are insightful. — Charlene Spretnak, editor, The Politics of Women”s Spirituality
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