What is it about?

This article is a personal recollection of my life as a pagan and an academic. From early encounters with Methodism, Will Durant and Anton LaVey, my spiritual questing intersected with the Haight-Ashbury Counterculture. One culmination of this encounter was the emergence of the Strawberry Hill Coven. A second culmination was my disenchantment with Turtle Island and self-exile to Europe. In time – after many years of wandering through both Europe and India, I began to read for my Ph.D. at King’s College London and became completely seduced by the academic world. This seduction coincided with the rise of contemporary Western paganism as a new religious movement as well as the sociological interest in understanding the movement. The rest of this contribution delineates what I have been able to witness of the advance of Pagan Studies within the field of education. Successes have been slow but incremental and steady. For the well-being of our planet, they are also vitally necessary.

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Why is it important?

Paganism is in main a response to the threat of environmental disaster to our planet.

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This page is a summary of: Navigating Academia and Spirituality from a Pagan Perspective, Pomegranate The International Journal of Pagan Studies, January 2016, Equinox Publishing,
DOI: 10.1558/pome.v17i1-2.29681.
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