2019/02/03

Joanna Macy - Wikipedia



Joanna Macy - Wikipedia
Joanna Macy
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Joanna Rogers Macy

Born 2 May 1929 (age 89)
Occupation Author, Buddhist scholar, environmental activist
Nationality American


Joanna Rogers Macy (born May 2, 1929), is an environmental activist, author, scholar of Buddhism, general systems theory, and deep ecology. She is the author of eight books.[1]


Contents
1Biography
2Key Influences
3Work
4Writings
5See also
6References
7External links


Biography[edit]

Macy graduated from Wellesley Collegein 1950 and received her Ph.D in Religious Studies in 1978 from Syracuse University, Syracuse. She studied there with Huston Smith, the influential author of The World's Religions (previously entitled The Religions of Man). 

She is an international spokesperson for anti-nuclear causes, peace, justice, and environmentalism,[1] most renowned for her book Coming Back to Life: Practices to Reconnect Our Lives, Our World and the Great Turning initiative, which deals with the transformation from, as she terms it, an industrial growth society to what she considers to be a more sustainable civilization. She has created a theoretical framework for personal and social change, and a workshop methodology for its application. Her work addresses psychological and spiritual issues, Buddhist thought, and contemporary science. She was married to the late Francis Underhill Macy, the activist and Russian scholar who founded the Center for Safe Energy.[citation needed]

Key Influences[edit]

Macy first encountered Buddhism in 1965 while working with Tibetan refugees in northern India, particularly the Ven. 8th Khamtrul Rinpoche, Sister Karma Khechog Palmo, Ven. Dugu Choegyal Rinpoche, and Tokden Antrim of the Tashi Jong community. Her spiritual practice is drawn from the Theravada tradition of Nyanaponika Thera and Rev. Sivali of Sri Lanka, Munindraji of West Bengal, and Dhiravamsa of Thailand.

Key formative influences to her teaching in the field of the connection to living systems theory have been Ervin Laszlo who introduced her to systems theory through his writings (especially Introduction to Systems Philosophy and Systems, Structure and Experience), and who worked with her as advisor on her doctoral dissertation (later adapted as Mutual Causality) and on a project for the Club of Rome. Gregory Bateson, through his Steps to an Ecology of Mind and in a summer seminar, also shaped her thought, as did the writings of Ludwig von Bertalanffy, Arthur Koestler, and Hazel Henderson
She was influenced in the studies of biological systems by Tyrone Cashman, and economic systems by Kenneth Boulding
Donella Meadows provided insights on the planetary consequences of runaway systems, and Elisabet Sahtourisprovided further information about self-organizing systems in evolutionary perspective.

Work[edit]

Macy travels giving lectures, workshops, and trainings internationally. Her work, originally called "Despair and Empowerment Work" was acknowledged as being part of the deep ecology tradition after she encountered the work of Arne Naess and John Seed [2], but as a result of disillusion with academic disputes in the field, she now calls it "the Work that Reconnects". 
Widowed by the death of her husband, Francis Underhill Macy, in January 2009, she lives in Berkeley, California, near her children and grandchildren. 

Writings[edit]

Library resources about
Joanna Macy

Resources in your library
Resources in other libraries
By Joanna Macy

Resources in your library
Resources in other libraries

  • Despair and Personal Power in the Nuclear Age; New Society Pub (1983); ISBN 0-86571-031-7
  • Dharma and Development: Religion as resource in the Sarvodaya self help movement; Kumarian Press revised ed (1985);
  • Thinking Like a Mountain: Toward a Council of All Beings; Joanna Macy, John Seed, Pat Fleming, Arne Naess, Dailan Pugh; New Society Publishers (1988); 
  • Mutual Causality in Buddhism and General Systems Theory: The Dharma of Natural System (Buddhist Studies Series); State University of New York Press (1991); 
  • Rilke's Book of Hours: Love Poems to God; poems by Rainer Maria Rilke, translated by Anita Barrows and Joanna Macy; Riverhead Books (1996);
  • Coming Back to Life : Practices to Reconnect Our Lives, Our World; Joanna R. Macy, Molly Young Brown; New Society Publishers (1998);
  • Widening Circles : a memoir ; New Catalyst Books (2001); ISBN 978-1897408018
  • World as Lover, World as Self; Parallax Press (2005); 
  • "Pass It On: Five Stories That Can Change the World"; Parallax Press (2010); 
  • "Active Hope : how to face the mess we're in without going crazy"; Joanna Macy, Chris Johnstone; New World Library (2012)

See also[edit]

David Korten, a collaborator with Macy on the Great Turning Initiative
References[edit]

^ Jump up to:a b George Prentice (January 18, 2012). "Anti-nuclear activist is 'just a sucker for courage'". Boise Weekly.
^ "John Seed is founder and director of the Rainforest Information Centre in Australia".


External links[edit]
Wikiquote has quotations related to: Joanna Macy

Joanna Macy's website on the work of Experiential Deep Ecology
Gaia Foundation of Western Australia — an Australian organisation based on the principles of Deep Ecology.
California Institute of Integral Studies

Interview with Joanna Macy by John Malkin — published in ascent magazine, summer 2008
The Healing on Mother Earth Project — a Sebastopol, Ca organisation based on the principles of deep ecology.
"The Work that Reconnects" — Video series of a workshop with Joanna Macy.

A Wild Love for the World, an interview with Joanna Macy, by Krista Tippet on the American Radio Show "On Being." This page provides links to the original program that first aired in 2010, along with the unedited version of the program. Macy also recites many Rilke poems during the show, but some of these poems are edited out so you can listen to them recited individually.

"Allegiance to Life: Staying steady through the mess we're in," An interview with Joanna Macy from Tricycle: The Buddhist Review