Oct. 11, 2023

The Mothers Of Invention

The Mothers Of Invention

With a steady stream of new research coming to light, it is becoming clear that the version of Western history we are taught in school - has a thick layer of patriarchal myth-making.
Heide Goettner-Abendroth has spent her whole life studying what thi...

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Subject To Power

With a steady stream of new research coming to light, it is becoming clear that the version of Western history we are taught in school - has a thick layer of patriarchal myth-making.

Heide Goettner-Abendroth has spent her whole life studying what this patriarchal overlay is hiding, and in her new book Matriarchal Societies of the Past and the Rise of Patriarchy in Europe and West Asia, using a new matriarchal paradigm, she reveals evidence of an ancient past that looks very different from the official history of “civilization” that our Western history promotes.

In this episode, Heide talks through the evidence that points to millennia of peaceful development taking place in mother-centered cultures, throughout the Neolithic and before that, the Paleolithic. Human societies with well-developed social structures, whose creativity and inventions laid the foundation for life as we know it.

Credits

Host: Elle Kamihira

Produced by Elle Kamihira

Audio Engineering by Jason Sheesley at Abridged Audio

Cover Art by Bee Johnson

Music by Beware of Darkness 

Dr. Heide Goettner-AbendrothProfile Photo

Dr. Heide Goettner-Abendroth

Founder & Director of International Academia Hagia of Modern Matriarchal Studies

Dr. Heide Goettner-Abendroth is a mother and a grandmother. She earned her Ph.D. in philosophy of science at the University of Munich where she lectured for ten years (1973-1983).

She has published on philosophy of science, and extensively on matriarchal society and culture, and through her lifelong research on matriarchal societies has become the founder of Modern Matriarchal Studies. Her main works are Matriarchal Societies: Studies on Indigenous Cultures across the Globe, (New York 2013, Peter Lang) in which she defines scientifically this new field of knowledge and provides a world tour of examples of contemporary matriarchal cultures; Matriarchal Societies of the Past and the Rise of Patriarchy in West Asia and Europe (New York 2022, Peter Lang) in which she uses her deep knowledge about matriarchal societies to review archaeological records and re-write the history of cultures.

She has been visiting professor at the University of Montreal in Canada, and the University of Innsbruck in Austria. She lectured extensively at home and abroad. In 1986, she founded the International Academy HAGIA for Modern Matriarchal Studies in Germany, and since then has been its director.

In 2003, 2005 and 2011 she guided three World Congresses on Matriarchal Studies in Europe and the U.S.A. She was twice a nominee for the Nobel Peace Prize, in 2005 by a Swiss initiative, in 2008 by a Finish initiative.