Patricia Monaghan Explained

Patricia Monaghan
Birth Date:February 15, 1946
Death Date:[1]
Occupation:poet, writer, scholar, professor; viticulturist
Spouse:Michael McDermott
Warren Mitchell (1969–1978)

Patricia Monaghan (February 15, 1946, – November 11, 2012) was a poet, a writer, a spiritual activist, and an influential figure in the contemporary women's spirituality movement.[2] Monaghan wrote over 20 books on a range of topics including Goddess spirituality, earth spirituality, Celtic mythology, the landscape of Ireland, and techniques of meditation. In 1979, she published the first encyclopedia of female divinities, a book which has remained steadily in print since then and was republished in 2009 in a two volume set as The Encyclopedia of Goddesses and Heroines. She was a mentor to many scholars and writers including biologist Cristina Eisenberg, poet Annie Finch, theologian Charlene Spretnak, and anthropologist Dawn Work-MaKinne, and was the founding member of the Association for the Study of Women and Mythology,[3] which brought together artists, scholars, and researchers of women-centered mythology and Goddess spirituality for the first time in a national academic organization.

Early life, education, and academic career

Patricia Monaghan was born on February 15, 1946. Her parents, Mary Gordon and Edward Monaghan, were Irish-American. Patricia spent her early years on Long Island surrounded by a large extended family. Several years of illness kept her housebound during formative years, during which time she read voraciously as well as learning to embroider, the first of many traditional crafts that were an important part of her leisure throughout her life. When Patricia was in fourth grade, her family moved to Colorado, following the transfer of her father, an Air Force officer. From there, they moved to Alaska.

Monaghan earned her B.A. and her first graduate degree at the University of Minnesota, where she studied English and French literature. She maintained an ongoing interest in French literature, especially in the symbolist poets. After graduate school, she worked as a journalist in both Minnesota and Alaska, writing about culture, nature, and the intersection of the two. She also earned an MFA in creative writing (poetry) from the University of Alaska and a Ph.D in Interdisciplinary Studies (science and literature) from Union Institute in Cincinnati. In 1995, Patricia Monaghan joined the faculty of the School for New Learning at DePaul University, where she taught classes in arts and environmental sciences until 2011, eventually attaining the rank of Full Professor. .[4]

Spirituality and mythology

Throughout her career, Patricia Monaghan's work dealt with issues of spirituality, especially women's spirituality. In 1979, she published the first encyclopedia of female divinities, a book which has remained steadily in print since then and was eventually republished in a two volume set as The Encyclopedia of Goddesses and Heroines. She also published an encyclopedia of Celtic myth, The Encyclopedia of Celtic Myth and Folklore, and edited a three-volume collection of essays entitled Goddesses in World Culture, published in 2010 by ABC-CLIO. Her other books on this subject are The Goddess Path, her original retellings of stories of goddesses from around the world accompanied by poems and meditations; and The Goddess Companion, a collection of goddess-based meditations for each day of the year. Wild Girls: The Path of the Young Goddess re-tells stories for girls about youthful goddesses.

Monaghan held dual Irish and American citizenship.[4] She brought her lifelong interest in Ireland together with her commitment to women's spirituality in The Red-Haired Girl from the Bog: The Landscape of Celtic Myth and Spirit (2003), a poetic yet scholarly recounting of Irish myth, tale, and tradition.[5]

A practitioner of qigong, za-zen and several other forms of meditation, Patricia collaborated with yoga teacher Eleanor (Teri) Viereck to write the encyclopedic Meditation: The Complete Guide, which was published in 1999. A revised and expanded edition included several new sections and expanded resource lists.

A longtime member of the Society of Friends (Quakers), Monaghan was also a companion of the Fourth Order of Sts. Frances and Clare, an interfaith religious organization. She taught workshops on women's spirituality through the Women's Thealogical Institute and the Temple of Diana.

In keeping with her earth-centered spiritual path, Monaghan honored the sacred in nature. Her 1997 book Magical Gardens, a book of garden designs based in mythology, was reissued in 2012. Early in her career, she was a science writer and reporter.[6] At her home in Black Earth, Wisconsin, she and her husband, Michael McDermott, tended a vineyard, orchard, and large organic garden. She was also a wine expert,[7] and author of Wineries of Minnesota and Wisconsin.

At the time of her death, Monaghan had just finished co-editing with her spouse Dr. Michael McDermott an anthology of writings called Brigit: Sun of Womanhood. She was also revising The Encyclopedia of Goddesses and Heroines for a paperback edition. Both can be expected in 2013.

Poetry

Patricia Monaghan's four books of poetry share an emphasis on the book as more than a random collection of poems. Each centers on a specific theme. Her first book, Winterburning, explores the paradoxical connection between fire and ice in the arctic. Her second, Seasons of the Witch (winner of the Friends of Literature Award for poetry and the COVR award for best multimedia work), traces the seasons as metaphors for a woman's life; the poems have been set to music and recorded by Alaskan women artists and are available both within the book and separately. Dancing with Chaos uses the language and concepts of dynamical systems theory to examine human relationships.

Homefront deals with the impact of war on families. Folk composer Michael Smith set a number of the poems to music, and they have been recorded by Jamie O'Reilly as Songs of the Kerry Madwoman. In early 2011, The Grace of Ancient Land, a chapbook, was published by the Voices from the American Land series. It uses the framework of the traditional Mass to express the power of rural life in America's heartland. A longer version of this work, together with poems set in Ireland and capturing the connection of nature, culture and spirituality there, was published by Salmon Poetry under the title Sanctuary.

Organizational leadership

Patricia Monaghan was a founder of and Senior Fellow at The Black Earth Institute.,[8] an organization dedicated to inspiring artists to serve the causes of inclusive spirituality, protecting and healing the earth and fighting for social justice. She was also a leader in the founding and development of the Association for the Study of Women and Mythology,[3] an organization committed to recognizing and encouraging Goddess scholarship in academia and Goddess-inspired creative arts.

Honors and awards

Monaghan won a Pushcart Prize (2003) for "Physics and Grief". Her work was also included in Best American Spiritual Writing that year.[9] She won the 2008 Paul Gruchow Memorial Essay Award; the Phoenix Award for Poetry, Crowsnest Environmental Action Society, Alberta, Canada, 2003; and the Spirit of Inquiry Award, DePaul University, 2003.

Bibliography

Discography

Sources

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Mourning Patricia Monaghan (1946 – 2012) [updated] |publisher=) |date=2012-11-13 |accessdate=2012-11-19].
  2. http://womenandmythology.wordpress.com/2012/11/28/remembering-patricia-monaghan/
  3. http://womenandmythology.wordpress.com/Association for the Study of Women and Mythology website
  4. Book: Contemporary Authors: New Revision Series . . . 2006 . November 20, 2012 . https://web.archive.org/web/20161018213242/https://www.highbeam.com/doc/1G2-3417900135.html. dead. October 18, 2016.
  5. Kavanaugh, Patrick B. "One: Stories From The Bog: On the Underworld, the Underconsciousness, and the Undertaking." Contemporary Psychoanalytic Studies; 2011, Vol. 14, p1-21, 21p, 1 Illustration. Quote: "I am indebted to Patricia Monaghan's scholarly recounting of Irish myth, tale, and tradition (2003). Her poetical work provides much of the background context for "Stories from the Bog...". Retrieved November 18, 2012
  6. Anne Hanley. "Patricia Monaghan embraces scholarship and spirituality". Anchorage Daily News [Anchorage, Alaska] Feb 22, 2004: D7. Quote: "Although [Patricia Monaghan]'s visions are often ecstatic, her images are grounded. She was a science writer and reporter before being lured into the less-charted territory of mythology and Earth spirituality. A reviewer says Monaghan's work "links science and poetry in a passionate tango."
  7. http://wine.the-world-in-focus.com/?tag=patricia-monaghan The Wine Connoisseur Online Magazine
  8. http://www.blackearthinstitute.org/founders.shtml Black Earth Institute Website
  9. King, Barbara J. In Praise of Immersion: The Best American Spiritual Writing 2004
  10. Russo, Stacy. Review. Feminist Collections: A Quarterly of Women's Studies Resources; Fall 2010, Vol. 31 Issue 4, p23-34, 12p. Quote: "Patricia Monaghan is a recognized name in the arena of goddess spirituality and mythology.."
  11. Hitchcock, Eloise R. "The Encyclopedia of Celtic Mythology and Folklore (Book)", Library Journal, 03630277, 4/1/2004, Vol. 129, Issue 6. Retrieved November 18, 2012
  12. Sonia von Matt Stoddard. "The Red-Haired Girl From the Bog". Whole Life Times. 254 (June 2003): p40
  13. Jeff Zaleski. "Wild Girls". Publishers Weekly. 3/12/2001, Vol. 248, Issue 11.
  14. "The Goddess Companion." Publishers Weekly Nov 8, 1999: 64.