Announcement from the Fates and Graces: International Society of Mythology (ISM) to Host Next Myth Conference

The Fates and Graces Mythologium was an annual conference for mythologists and friends of myth that started in 2019, the year we (Stephanie and Joanna) finished our dissertations. It continued from 2020 through 2023. We poured our hearts into it, and each year, the community poured their hearts into it as well.

We are so proud of how this community shared ideas, inspired each other, and amplified each other’s work. Over the years, the Mythologium hosted more than 200 presentations. The community wrote, listened, discussed, and lifted each presenter with generous appreciation. Together, we all furthered the work of each of those mythologists and the field of mythological studies.

2023 Mythologium session. Photo by Timothy Teague

Introducing the International Society of Mythology

In 2020, when the world pivoted to Zoom, a new group of myth students found themselves having classes online. They missed the connections that would have happened in person, so they started their own online community group called Mythic Musings. They met weekly for formal presentations, or informal conversations, or sometimes what they called “mythic hangovers.” They recently had their 101st meeting.

Mythic Musings has grown and strengthened in parallel with the Mythologium, and now is ready to launch a professional association for mythologists called the International Society of Mythology, or ISM. Part of their work will include hosting a myth conference. Visit their website today to join their email list and stay up to date.

Handing the myth conference baton to ISM

We (Stephanie and Joanna) are honored to hand the baton of an annual myth conference to this new organization. We will share what we’ve learned about organizing myth conferences with the ISM team, but ISM has such fantastic ideas and so much great energy that we don’t want to get in their way. We hope to attend and maybe even present at the first ISM conference, which will have a theme of Myth and Creativity.

Most of all, we hope you join us in supporting ISM as they take the myth conference baton and run with it, the same way they’ll support whoever follows them. We hope you join us in entering into the invitation of Myth and Creativity, perhaps to re-center in your own creative work, perhaps to connect myth and creativity in new ways.

2024: Myth and Creativity

What’s next for the Fates and Graces? We don’t know yet, but we have some ideas, and we know it has to do with Myth and Creativity. We’ll be working on our plans over the next few months, and when we know more, we’ll let you know. In the meantime, we’ll continue our solstice and equinox gatherings for patrons.

We poured our hearts into the Mythologium, five times over. Five times over, the community filled our hearts back up. We’re all co-creating the field of mythological studies, now in ever new ways. We are so proud of what you have created, what you are now creating, and everything you’ll create that you haven’t even imagined yet.

We can’t wait to see what comes next, for all of us.

Drs. Stephanie Zajchowski and Joanna Gardner. Photo by Timothy Teague

Mythologium 2023 welcomes Sue Bayliss

Sue’s presentation is called “The Way of the Heart in Hans Christian Andersen’s ‘The Snow Queen’: An Ecofeminist Interpretation”

Han Christian Andersen’s tale “The Snow Queen” shows us the power of the heart when it has a deep connection to the natural world. It can melt the icy grip of hyper-rationality, divorced from all feeling. The character Gerda can be seen as an early ecofeminist, able to communicate with rivers, flowers, ravens. and reindeer. Hers is a heroine’s journey in the tradition of Joseph Campbell’s monomyth inspired by love and aided by spiritual powers, both pagan and Christian.

The Snow Queen herself and her palace represent the triumph of Enlightenment values: the cold, utilitarian, left hemispheric outlook that is even more prevalent today. In my presentation we will look at this fairy tale through the lens of ecofeminism, Iain McGilchrist’s hemisphere theory, and the science of heart neurology.

The Snow Queen contrasts the values of cultural creatives (originally those of the Romantics) with the materialist, exploitative mindset that is destroying our planet and our communities. We need the power of the heart to restore our relationship with the Earth and with each other. As a child I loved this story and it inspired me to choose the way of the heart. It can inspire us today.

About Sue

Sue Bayliss is a poet, writer, holistic therapist and trainer. She has always been fascinated by mythology and has written a book entitled The Hero’s Path: Changing the Story of the World by Reclaiming our True Selves, which encourages us to see our lives through the lens of the hero’s journey. She is also an activist who cares passionately about our beautiful planet and about social justice.

To hear Sue’s talk and many others, join us at the Mythologium!

The Mythologium is a conference for mythologists and friends of myth. This year’s Mythologium will be held July 28-30 in-person and online in the Pacific time zone.

Mythologium 2023 welcomes Rick Alexander

Rick’s presentation is called “Tantra and the Erotic Heart of Individuation”

For Carl Jung, the chakra system represents a symbolic theory of the psyche, displaying its evolution as it moves through various levels of consciousness. While the west tends to associate psyche solely with the intellect or mind, Kundalini presents an image of psyche that is not only spread throughout the body, but even reaches beyond it. This puts the western-minded person in a precarious situation. “We are confronted with a paradox; for us consciousness is located high up, in the ajna chakra, so to speak, and yet muladhara, our reality, lies in the lowest chakra” (Jung, Psychology of Kundalini Yoga, 60). To further complicate the matter, Jung understood the level of consciousness most associated with individuation, the goal of his analytical psychology, as occurring at the anahata (heart) chakra. Within each person then, lies an inherent division that must be reconciled in order to “become whole.” This requires Eros—an embodied relational capacity wherein our own longing can be seen as the driving force toward individuation—bringing disparate elements of the psyche together in a sacred marriage.

The Vijñāna-Bhairava Tantra, a collection of sutras that originate in Kashmir, India circa 800 CE, offers additional Tantric images by which one can imagine the work of psychic development. It is a conversation between lovers, Shiva and Shakti, who have been separated since creation and who long for reconciliation in the human heart. Here, the body itself is imagined as a container where the original cosmogonic romance is recapitulated. This presentation dreams forward the dialogue between Tantra and Jungian psychology, exploring its implications on the body, the development of the personality, and ultimately, one’s place within the cosmic order itself.

About Rick

Rick Alexander is an author, speaker, and coach. He is also currently pursuing a Ph.D. at Pacifica Graduate Institute where he studies comparative mythology and depth psychology, following the path of thinkers like Joseph Campbell and Carl Jung. His written material, lectures, and personal client work draw heavily from contemplative spiritual traditions of the east and west and are centered in depth and archetypal psychology. He speaks and writes predominantly on psychological wellness, the Hero’s Journey, and the quest to find meaning in life. Recently, he taught workshops and lectured for organizations around the world including the United States Air Force and Bell Canada, as well as for specialized retreats, private events, and academic conferences.

To hear Rick’s talk and many others, join us at the Mythologium!

The Mythologium is a conference for mythologists and friends of myth. This year’s Mythologium will be held July 28-30 in-person and online in the Pacific time zone.

Mythologium 2023 welcomes Alyssa Herzinger

Alyssa’s presentation is called “A World of One’s Own: How Fantasy Facilitates the Development of the Inner Voice of Women”

This presentation will explore how the liminality of the fantasy genre and the labyrinthine Heroine’s Journey support the development of women’s inner voices and identities. Both provide space for women authors to explore new worlds of possibility while also providing examples and role models for women readers to emulate in their own lives.

Fantasy is where a woman can create not only a “room of one’s own,” but an entire imaginary world of her own. This space of possibility — for writers, readers, and characters, is inherently a liminal one, reflected in the physical settings of many of these stories. It is not a coincidence that so many myths, fantasy stories, and tales of women finding themselves happen so often in extreme parts of nature, especially where the earth meets the sea — where a cliff and a breeze threaten a fatal fall.

About Alyssa

Alyssa Herzinger, MFA is a writer, actor, musician, researcher, and creative facilitator focused on women’s experiences and identities. Her career has spanned academia, the arts, startups, social work, and tech, which she has brought together through her focus on helping women find and use their voices to advocate for themselves and others.

As a Master’s student in Actor-Musicianship, she co-developed a compositional and divinatory technique called Musicomancy, which she used to compose the Tarot-based album, Lilies in the Bardo. She is the author of Pioneer: Creating Your Own Path After Mormonism, and she has written and co-written several plays, including Devout, an autobiographical story about leaving a high-demand religion; Killer Boss, a musical comedy about modern workplaces, and Full Fathom Five, a musical prequel to The Tempest. She is currently developing an actor-musician play about a 19th-century composer.

To hear Alyssa‘s talk and many others, join us at the Mythologium!

The Mythologium is a conference for mythologists and friends of myth. This year’s Mythologium will be held July 28-30 in-person and online in the Pacific time zone.

Mythologium 2023 welcomes Julie Ciecior

Julie’s presentation is called “The Self-Care System of Helen of Troy: Dividing of a Soul”

The enigmatic heart of Helen of Troy has been the subject of our projections for thousands of years. She has lived in our minds in shame as the too-beautiful whore who caused the Trojan War. Perhaps there is more mythos waiting to unfold?

This presentation will utilize Euripides’ play, Helen, as well as Donald Kalsched’s work, “The Inner Word of Trauma: Archetypal Defenses of the Personal Spirit.” I propose that traumatic experiences in Helen’s life may have caused Helen to psychologically divide into the eidolon in Euipidies’ play, Helen. This is to say that psychologically speaking, Helen retreats with Paris in eidolon form, while her physical form remains in Egypt. Kalsched notes that the term, ‘daimonic’ comes from daiomai, which means to divide.” Her eidolon appears to be what Kalsched defines as “the self-care system,’ which arises to protect the heart and soul of the traumatized person. I will explore the function of this protective system and how it may soften our own hearts towards Helen’s plight.

The presentation will end by investigating how her reunion with her love, Menelaus, supports the process of her psyche coming back together and healing the psychological divide she has endured.

About Julie

Julie Ciecior, MA, LPC, is a Colorado based depth psychotherapist, adoptee, mother, mythologist, writer, and tireless seeker of meaning making. She is currently pursuing a MA/PhD degree in Mythology with an Emphasis on Depth Psychology through Pacifica Graduate Institute. She is particularly interested in the intersection between creativity, mythology, psychology, and soul. When these elements meet in the alchemical cauldron that we call life, the real magic arises and this is where her heart leads her research.

To hear Julie‘s talk and many others, join us at the Mythologium!

The Mythologium is a conference for mythologists and friends of myth. This year’s Mythologium will be held July 28-30 in-person and online in the Pacific time zone.

Mythologium 2023 welcomes Dr. Jean Benedict Raffa

Dr. Raffa’s presentation is called “Remyth Your Story: Integrate Your Feminine and Masculine Archetypes with Heart”

Our family and social groups condition us from childhood to hold certain beliefs and attitudes about gender differences. Unawareness of the influence of archetypes traditionally associated with the feminine and masculine principles impedes our ability to live authentic, meaningful lives based on the truths of our hearts.

We can recognize the difference between archetypes and stereotypes, and between inherent archetypes and personal archetypal images, by reflecting on our dreams, emotions, instincts, attitudes, and numinous experiences. Evolving self-awareness leads us away from dependence on the collective and into our personal authority. Fortified by self-acceptance, self-love, and personal meaning, we are empowered to change our life story and follow our hearts to fulfilling work and loving relationships.

Dr. Jean Benedict Raffa explores the interface between psychology, mythology, spirituality, and your life’s myth in her newest, Nautilus Award-winning book, The Soul’s Twins: Emancipate Your Feminine and Masculine Archetypes.

About Dr. Raffa

After a lengthy and life-transforming spiritual descent, educator, Jungian scholar, and author Jean Benedict Raffa, Ed.D., began an in-depth study of Jungian psychology, mythology, and her dreams. Her books, The Bridge to Wholeness, Dream Theatres of the Soul, the Wilbur Award-winning Healing the Sacred Divide, and the Nautilus Award-winning The Soul’s Twins, are outgrowths of this ongoing inner work. A former teacher, television producer and college professor, Dr. Raffa continues to make presentations about her books. For more information, subscribe to Dr. Raffa’s blog, Matrignosis, and find her on Facebook.

To hear Dr. Raffa’s talk and many others, join us at the Mythologium!

The Mythologium is a conference for mythologists and friends of myth. This year’s Mythologium will be held July 28-30 in-person and online in the Pacific time zone.

Mythologium 2023 welcomes Laura Lewis-Barr

Laura’s presentation is called “The Inner Child at Play: Using Fairy Tale Stop Motion Films in Inner Work”

“Fairy tales are the simplest and purest expressions of the collective unconscious and thus offer the clearest understanding of the basic patterns of the human psyche.” —Marie-Louis von Franz

Stop motion films and fairy tales speak to our heart center and the inner child. Laura’s films are homemade creations that beckon us toward play. Laura will share how these films are being used in small groups and their resonance in our own inner life. She will also explore challenges to the heart space in creativity, including the myths of perfectionism and proving our worth in the marketplace.

About Laura

Laura Lewis-Barr was a graduate student in clinical psychology but switched majors and earned her M.A in theater. In 2019 Laura began making stop motion films focused on fairy tales. Now she is an award-winning stop-motion filmmaker and educator.

Laura’s focus is on animating fairy tales and mythic stories for personal and collective transformation. She is inspired by the work of Joseph Campbell, Carl Jung, and Michael Meade. Laura’s films are made in her basement in Chicago. Her screening events are filled with heart and questions for the soul.

To hear Laura’s talk and many others, join us at the Mythologium!

The Mythologium is a conference for mythologists and friends of myth. This year’s Mythologium will be held July 28-30 in-person and online in the Pacific time zone.

The Mythologium 2023 experience

A celebration of community connections

2023 marks the fifth anniversary of the Fates and Grace Mythologium. This year will also be our first in-person gathering since 2019. And for the first time ever, the event will be held on the Lambert Campus of Pacifica Graduate Institute, with a streaming option for online attendees. These reasons alone are enough to guarantee that the Mythologium 2023 experience will be different than other years.

But that’s not all! More fun changes are in the works as well.

For one thing, we can only stream the myth feed from one location on campus, which means we’ll only have one track this year. We’ll all be together, for all the presentations, online or in-person.

What’s more, the community of mythologists submitted more proposals for presentations this year than any other year yet.

So how can we have a conference with more presentations but fewer time slots for panels? By designing an experience around community connections and celebration. Here’s the plan.

Introducing… MythFlix!

At the 2023 Mythologium:

  • Each presenter will make a video recording of their 20-minute presentation ahead of time.
  • We will post the presentations a week before the Mythologium, in a video collection we’re calling MythFlix, so that all registered attendees have time to preview the presentations.
  • Then, at the Mythologium itself, July 28-30, each panel will have a 30-minute spotlight session. Each presenter will give us a 5-minute summary of their video, then we’ll have 15 minutes for the panel’s Yes-And discussion. Panels with online presenters will be projected onto the big screen for the in-person audience.
  • We will not record the live Mythologium, but all registered attendees will have access to the 2023 MythFlix video catalog before and after the conference.

More mythic merriment in person

The in-person 2023 Mythologium experience will also include a happy hour on Saturday night, long lunch breaks to facilitate conversations, and a vocation fair with walk-up marketing consultations and a photographer to take headshots for attendees.

We are also offering an optional workshop the day before the Mythologium called Your Soul’s Resume. The workshop will be in-person on Lambert campus on Thursday, July 27. Plan on a full day to deep-dive into creating or updating your Soul’s Resume. We won’t stream or record the workshop, so only register if you can attend live!

We can’t wait to connect and celebrate with you and the community!

Mythologium logo showing a line drawing of a goddess's head.

Mythologium 2023 welcomes our keynote speaker, Dr. Emily Lord-Kambitsch

We are thrilled to announce that the keynote speaker for the 2023 Mythologium will be Dr. Emily Lord-Kambitsch. Building on last year’s theme of ecological consciousness, and directly addressing this year’s theme of Myth and the Heart, Emily’s presentation will discuss Ovid’s Metamorphoses from an ecopsychological and posthumanist perspective. We appreciate how posthumanism takes humans and non-humans into account, embracing a world far bigger than just us people. Read on for the abstract of Emily’s talk.

Becoming Heart-less: Mythic Metamorphoses and the Posthuman

As humans, we are heart-carriers, and there is a certain anthropocentrism inherent in the human quest for a heart-centered relationship with the world through story. But the world we inhabit contains countless sensate organisms who do not have hearts, but whose subjective experience is nevertheless imagined, recorded, and transmitted through myth and folklore in sensory, psychological, moral, and spiritual terms that we can understand.

The Roman poet Ovid’s epic, Metamorphoses, offers many tales of human or humanoid creatures undergoing transformation into non-human (and some heart-less) beings. Treating examples from this text through a dual perspective of ecopsychology and posthumanism, we will seek to understand how myths offer a way for us to observe ourselves in contact with the mysterious subjectivities of the “heart-less” beings in our world, from plants and stones to the ever-listening Amazon Alexa housed in the corner of the living room, through the capacities of the human heart.

About Emily

A lifelong poet-storyteller and student of ancient Mediterranean languages and literature, Emily Lord-Kambitsch, PhD is Co-Chair and Associate Core faculty in the Mythological Studies program at Pacifica Graduate Institute. She teaches courses in Greco-Roman myth, ritual studies, memoir and self-writing, research approaches, and dissertation formulation. Outside of Pacifica she leads workshops in “Mythic Movement,” a practice of personal myth-making through deep listening and intuitive movement. Emily is passionate about supporting students’ connection with the perennial stories that call to them through academic, artistic, and personal lenses.

Mythologium 2023 Theme

The 2023 Mythologium will be held July 28-30, 2023, and the theme will be Myth and the Heart.

Myth and the Heart

“I am certain of nothing but the holiness of the Heart’s affections and the truth of the Imagination.”

– John Keats

Your physical heart beats the rhythm of your life. Your metaphorical heart beats the rhythm of your soul. We speak of broken hearts, open hearts, heavy hearts, full hearts. Metaphorically, the heart represents love, warmth, courage, passion – and a machine-like pump. The literal heart, however, is a muscle, which means it is strong. It creates an audible beat, which means it’s musical. The heart changes tempo in different situations, which means it is responsive. 

What does myth say about the heart’s presence and powers? What ancient and contemporary myths help us take the heart seriously, heeding the heart and practicing heart care? How do myth and the heart relate to current events and life challenges? Following James Hillman, what archetypes visit when we inhabit heart space? Following Martin Buber, how might we meet the heart not as an it but as a thou

Areas of Focus

We are especially interested in presentations about myth, the heart, and: 

- social justice & BIPOC voices
- environmental issues
- technology
- feminism
- gender
- politics