Reckoning with the History of Witchcraft: Modern Queer Wiccan and Pagan Communities
Oct
14
6:00 PM18:00

Reckoning with the History of Witchcraft: Modern Queer Wiccan and Pagan Communities

  • The Robert H. Smith Auditorium at the New-York Historical Society (map)
  • Google Calendar ICS

Event Details:

As witchcraft practitioners, contemporary religious scholars, and cultural (re)organizers, queer leaders of Pagan and Wiccan communities share experiences reconciling the historical trauma of past witch trials and attempted cultural erasure with their work building dynamic communities. In partnership, the American LGBTQ+ Museum and New-York Historical’s Center for Women’s History welcome you to celebrate the new exhibition,The Salem Witch Trials: Reckoning and Reclaiming (on view in the Joyce B. Cowin Women’s History Gallery from October 7, 2022 to January 22, 2023).

The evening will commence  with a performance by Catherine Cabeen, modern dancer and choreographer, followed by a discussion about the role and power of queerness in the reclaiming of witchcraft as an identity today. Join  Marcelitte Failla, a Black and biracial educator, researcher, and scholar of African heritage religions in the United States and throughout the African diaspora; Christopher Penczak, modern Witch and co-founder of the Temple of Witchcraft tradition and community; and Raquel Salas Rivera, a Puerto Rican poet, translator, editor, and founding member of the Yerbamala Collective in conversation with moderator Ben Garcia, Executive Director of the American LGBTQ+ Museum as they discuss the role queerness plays in the difficult task of reclaiming witchcraft.

This salon is presented in partnership with the American LGBTQ+ Museum

Lead support for the Center for Women's History programs provided by Joyce B. Cowin, Diane and Adam E. Max, Jean Margo Reid, and the Mellon Foundation.

Location:

The Robert H. Smith Auditorium at the New-York Historical Society, 170 Central Park West, New York, NY 10024

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Jan
19
3:00 PM15:00

Intro to Religions of the African Diaspora

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If you are in ATL @soul.productions and @marcelitte invite you to an introduction to the African Diasporic religions, Ifá, Vodou, and Hoodoo. In this interactive workshop, we will build an ancestor altar and work some manifestation magic with Hoodoo herbs!

Sunday, January 19th
3pm-6pm
$5 donation for supplies
Send via Paypal to marcelitte.f@gmail.com to RSVP
132 Mitchell Street SW 3rd Floor
Atlanta GA

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Mar
20
4:00 PM16:00

Decolonizing Religion

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Scholars across disciplines have begun to examine the colonial legacies of their theories, methods, and epistemologies. What does this mean for the study of religion? Join us to discuss postcolonial theory and ongoing efforts to decolonize the study of religion. The workshop speakers will examine the theoretical insights of postcolonial theory, share personal and professional experiences towards decolonizing the study of religion, and 45 minutes of discussion about the implications for individual scholars and institutional structures at Emory, AAR, SBL, and elsewhere in the academy. 

Featured Speakers: Dr. Kwok Pui Lan (Candler School of Theology) and Marcelitte Failla (GDR student) 

Dr. Jim Hoesterey, Moderator

Wednesday March 20, 4:00–5:30 pm 

Callaway S-107

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Nov
14
4:00 PM16:00

Dark Sciences Dreaming Workshop

  • National Womens Studies Association Conference (map)
  • Google Calendar ICS
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In this hands-on workshop, we will explore the transformative power and potential of collective dreaming through a queer black feminist lens. We begin with the premise that dreams, both shared and individual, have always been essential to social movements, including the M4BL, precisely because they carry crucial and critical information about how to make change in service of the future. The space of dreams remains an important counter-space and resource for our communities that together, we will tap into while discussing the ways in which dreamwork has shaped black feminisms from Nanny of the Maroons to Audre Lorde and beyond.


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