
Hidden Circles in the Web
Feminist Wicca, Occult Knowledge, and Process Thought
Constance Wise(Author)
AltaMira Press
Published on 16. May 2008
Book
Hardback
162 pages
978-0-7591-1006-9 (ISBN)
Description
As one of the fastest growing Pagan traditions, Feminist Wicca appeals to many through its emphasis on the deep interconnectedness of life and its focus on the woman's religious experience. In Hidden Circles in the Web, scholar and practitioner Constance Wise explores Feminist Wicca through the lens of process thought, developing a new theaology of feminist spirituality that can enrich and deepen the religious practice. Although the twentieth-century philosophy of process thought is often portrayed as a complex and inaccessible system, Wise explains its concepts in simple language and illustrates her points with accessible examples from life.
Wise invites readers into the hidden wisdom of Feminist Wicca and process thought, proposing statements of Feminist Wiccan beliefs and practices in six areas: history, anthropology, epistemology, ethics, cosmology, and theaology. While the focus of the book is on Feminist Wicca, her insights into process thought apply to an array of traditions and will interest a range of practitioners and scholars across the religious spectrum.
Wise invites readers into the hidden wisdom of Feminist Wicca and process thought, proposing statements of Feminist Wiccan beliefs and practices in six areas: history, anthropology, epistemology, ethics, cosmology, and theaology. While the focus of the book is on Feminist Wicca, her insights into process thought apply to an array of traditions and will interest a range of practitioners and scholars across the religious spectrum.
Reviews / Votes
Creatively, Constance Wise discovers unexpected cogency in extraordinary religious practices. She uses process philosophy and personal narrative to unfold the richness implicit in an emerging form of American religious naturalism. -- William Dean, professor emeritus, Iliff School of Theology Process thought has played a role in the development of Christian feminist theology. Alongside those feminists who have undertaken to revise Christian teaching and reform Christian practice so as to end the exclusion of women, there are others who believe they can work to overcome the myriad tentacles of patriarchy more effectively from outside the deeply patriarchal Abrahamic traditions. Constance Wise has found her home in feminist Wicca. Now, like Carol Christ, Wise finds in the conceptuality developed in the process tradition a fruitful way of articulating the insights and experience of Wicca. -- John B.Cobb, Jr., CLAREMONT SCHOOL OF THEOLOGY An intriguing synthesis of Goddess spirituality and process thought. -- Carol P. Christ, author of She Who ChangesMore details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
California
United States
Target group
College/higher education
Professional and scholarly
Dimensions
Height: 235 mm
Width: 157 mm
Thickness: 14 mm
Weight
395 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-7591-1006-9 (9780759110069)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

E-Book
05/2008
1st Edition
AltaMira Press
€40.49
Available for download
Person
Constance Wise teaches religious studies, women's studies, and philosophy at the University of Colorado, Denver, the University of Northern Colorado, and Metropolitan College of Denver. She has practiced Feminist Wicca for thirty years and is co-founder and leader of two Feminist Wiccan groups in Denver.
Content
Chapter 1 Introduction: Finding What is Hidden
Chapter 2 Discovering the Hidden in Two Circles
Chapter 3 History and Anthropology: Resisting Historical and Gender Essentialism
Chapter 4 Epistemology and Ethics: Occult Knowledge and Moral Decisions
Chapter 5 Cosmology and Thealogy: The Web, the Goddess, and Magic
Chapter 2 Discovering the Hidden in Two Circles
Chapter 3 History and Anthropology: Resisting Historical and Gender Essentialism
Chapter 4 Epistemology and Ethics: Occult Knowledge and Moral Decisions
Chapter 5 Cosmology and Thealogy: The Web, the Goddess, and Magic