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Feminist Studies in Liturgy

Mission Statement

The Feminist Studies in Liturgy Seminar examines existing and new liturgies from a feminist perspective, and invites participants to explore new metaphors and new styles of liturgical expression and leadership.  Our commitment to inclusiveness leads us to consider not only texts but also gesture, environment, music and all aspects of embodied worship.  Our studies include the connections among formal worship, the academy and the larger society.

Convener

Susan Roll

Saint Paul University

223 Main Street

Ottawa, ON K1S 1C4

Canada

Office: 613-236-1393 ext. 2232

sroll@ustpaul.ca

 

2009 Academy Meeting Agenda

Theme: Metaphors, Rites and Blessings Around Birth and Life-Giving.

Papers and Presentations:

1.  Heather Murray Elkins, “Conceiving with Spirit and Truth”           

2.  Martha Ann Kirk, “‘Magnificat’: Women Bearing Life and Hope”           

3.  Sylvia Sweeney, “Blessing Babies Immediately After Birth”

4.  Karen Westerfield Tucker, “When the Cradle Is Empty.  Rites Acknowledging Stillbirth, Miscarriage and Infertility”           

5.  Susan Roll, “To Bless or Baptize a Stillborn Baby?”

6.  Deborah Sokolove, “Rituals and Metaphors for Ongoing Life in the Face of Challenge”

 

2008 Academy Meeting Agenda

The research and discussion theme of the Feminist Studies in Liturgy seminar group will be "Metaphors, Dying and Rising: how to claim, and how to create, living metaphors."  Presentations will include:

1.  Sylvia Sweeney, "An ecofeminist hermeneutic of death."  There are many different kinds of end of life experiences we have clumped together under the heading of death, and as a result of different vantage points in relation to the death experience death means different things to men and women.  The concept of death is itself a kind of metaphor that is not nearly as hegemonically interpreted as our Western Christian religious tradition might sometimes suggest.

2.  Susan Roll, "Metaphors in Christian worship: the quick and the dead." Several categories of nature metaphors common to Christian worship language and imagery have long been superceded by scientific knowledge. At best they reflect a prescientific level of perception that patronizes educated Christians, at worst they function to legitimize oppressive cultural, social, even economic relations.  Deconstructing them is easy, even fun: but how shall newer, creative, authentic, living metaphors be sought out and integrated into worship?

Number of participants: 18-20

Papers

The following paper is available online in PDF format.

"A Time to Live: Creating Rituals that Speak to Us and for Us in the Winter-time of Life," Linda Vogel, 2003.

Previous Seminar Reports

See seminar reports from annual meetings dating back to 2002:

2006 | 2005 | 2004 | 2003 | 2002