Living the Divine Spiritually and Politically
Art, Ritual and Performative/Pedagogy in Women’s Multi-faith Leadership
Barbara Bickel, Ph.D.
Dissertation Abstract
In a world of increasing religious/political tensions and conflicts this study
asks, what is the transformative significance of an arts and ritual-based approach
to developing and encouraging women’s spiritual and multi-faith leadership? To
counter destructive worldviews and practices that have divided people historically,
politically, personally and sacredly, the study reinforces the political and
spiritual value of women spiritual and multi-faith leaders creating and holding
sacred space for truth making and world making. An a/r/tographic and mindful
inquiry was engaged to assist self and group reflection within a group of women
committed to multi-faith education and leadership in their communities. The objectives
of the study were: 1) to explore through collaboration, ritual and art making
processes the women’s experience of knowing and not knowing, 2) to articulate
a curriculum for multi-faith consciousness raising, and 3) to develop a pedagogy
and methodology that can serve as a catalyst for individual and societal change
and transformation. The co-participants/co-inquirers (including the lead researcher
as a member of the group) are fourteen women, who practice within eleven different
religions and/or spiritual backgrounds, and who are part of a volunteer planning
team that organizes an annual women’s multi-faith conference (Women’s Spirituality
Celebration) in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. The aesthetic/ritual structure
of the labyrinth served as a cross-cultural multi-faith symbol in guiding the
dissertation, which includes three art installations and four documentary DVDs
of the process and art. New understandings found in the study include: 1) the
ethical sanctuary that a/r/tography as ritual enables for personal and collective
change to take place within, 2) the addition of synecdoche to the renderings
of a/r/tography, assisting a multi-dimensional spiral movement towards a whole
a/r/tographic practice, 3) a lived and radically relational curriculum of philetics
within loving community that drew forth the women’s erotic life force energy
and enhanced the women’s ability to remember the power of the feminine aspect
of the Divine, and 4) the decolonization of the Divine, art and education, which
took place as a pedagogy of wholeness unfolded, requiring a dialectic relationship
between restorative and transformative learning. |