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Tag: Clarissa Pinkola Estés

‘My friend, there are no friends’: on mourning, abandonment and reckonings

12th November 20207th January 2021  Sumaya Kassim

In the first essay of her co-edited and co-conceived series, Disembodied Voices: Friendship during COVID-19, Sumaya Kassim reflects on the breakdown of a friendship, exploring feelings of abandonment, rejection and grief that led her to self-evaluate and cultivate new intimacy and care.

Read More “‘My friend, there are no friends’: on mourning, abandonment and reckonings”
Posted in Creative Writing, Non-FictionTagged: abandonment, Aristotle, Aysha Abdulrazak, BLM, BLM 2020, Clarissa Pinkola Estés, Covid-19, Disembodied Voices, Disembodied Voices: Friendship During the Pandemic, friendship, Friendship During the Pandemic, I May Destroy You, Jacques Derrida, Lockdown, Lockdown Living, Pandemic, Sumaya Kassim

The Doll of Divine Discovery: Nocturnal Revelations of the Wild Woman in ‘Women Who Run with the Wolves’

26th October 20206th November 2020  Emma Korantema Hanson

Clarissa Pinkola Estés’ classic work, Women Who Run with the Wolves, encourages readers to embrace their inner ‘wild woman’ using myths from around the world. Here, our writer Emma Hanson explores the importance of night in one of the book’s tales, ‘Vasalisa’.

Read More “The Doll of Divine Discovery: Nocturnal Revelations of the Wild Woman in ‘Women Who Run with the Wolves’”
Posted in Arts, BooksTagged: Baba Yaga, Clarissa Pinkola Estés, La Llorona, Mythology, myths, Night, Night / Shift, non-fiction, Russian Folktales, Vasalisa, Wild Woman, Women Who Run with the Wolves
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    By Lottie Whalen
  • Motion and other poems by Catherine Norris
    By Catherine Norris
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    By Jennifer Brough
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