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Merlin Stone | |
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| Born | Marilyn Claire Jacobson (1931-09-27)September 27, 1931 Flatbush, Brooklyn, New York, United States |
| Died | February 23, 2011(2011-02-23) (aged 79) Daytona Beach, Florida, United States |
| Education | |
| Occupation(s) | Author, sculptor, professor |
| Employer(s) | State University of New York at Buffalo,Albright-Knox Art Gallery,University of California Berkeley |
| Notable work | When God Was a Woman |
| Television | Goddess Remembered documentary |
| Movement | Goddess movement |
| Partner | Lenny Schneir |
| Children | 2 |
| Awards | A Metallic Art Medal Award from Erasmus Hall High School and twoAlbright-Knox Annual Sculpture Awards (1962 and 1965) |
| Honours | Honorary doctoral degree awarded by theCalifornia Institute of Integral Studies |
Merlin Stone (bornMarilyn Jacobson;[1] September 27, 1931 – February 23, 2011) was an American author, artist and academic. She was an important thinker of thefeminist theology andGoddess[2] movements and is known for her bookWhen God Was a Woman.
Merlin Stone was born inFlatbush,Brooklyn,New York. She attended P.S. 217 andErasmus Hall High School, where she graduated in 1949 with a Metallic Art Medal Award.[3] After enrolling at theUniversity of Buffalo later that year and marrying in 1950, she continued her studies while raising her children, ultimately earning aB.S. andteaching certificate inart (with a minor injournalism) from the institution in 1958. She became interested inarchaeology and ancient religions from her study of ancient art.
From 1958 to 1967, she worked as a teacher andsculptor, exhibiting widely and executing numerous commissions. During this period, she was divorced from her first husband in 1963 and taught atBuffalo State College as an assistant professor of art (1962) and her alma mater (by now a SUNY university center) as an assistant professor of sculpture (1966).[4]
In 1968, she received an interdisciplinaryM.F.A. from theCalifornia College of Arts and Crafts. While based inOakland andBerkeley, California from 1967 to 1972, she taught at theUniversity of California, Berkeley's extension program, commenced research into ancient culture in earnest and expanded her practice to includekinetic sculpture,liquid light shows,performance art and collaborations with engineers.
She spent a decade on research before writing the book published in the UK asThe Paradise Papers and then in the U.S. asWhen God Was a Woman (1976). It describes her theory of how the Hebrews suppressed goddess-worshipping religions practiced inCanaan and how their reaction to what she says were existingmatriarchial andmatrilineal societal structures shapedJudaism and thusChristianity.[5] Her theory builds on the ideas ofRobert Graves,[6] but rather than starting from his work, Stone gathered material from the "libraries, museums, universities, and excavation sites of the United States, Europe and the Near East."[7] She observed within these materials "the sexual and religious bias of many of the erudite scholars of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries",[8] and challenges many of their conclusions, raising doubts about the criticisms of Graves's theories.
Her other major work,Ancient Mirrors of Womanhood, collects stories, myths, and prayers involving goddess figures from a wide variety of world religions, ancient and otherwise. Stone's hypotheses are radical and challenging to the accepted views of antiquity. She is the author of numerous short stories, book reviews, and essays, including3,000 Years of Racism.
Stone's bookWhen God Was a Woman had a profound effect on the internationalGoddess movement of the 1970s and 1980s.[3] She was featured in the 1989 documentaryGoddess Remembered.[9]
After residing inLondon (1972-1974; 1975) andQuadra Island, British Columbia (1974-1975), she and her life partner, Lenny Schneir, met inMiami Beach, Florida in 1976 while Stone (who had been recently widowed by her second husband) was serving as a caregiver for her father. They lived inNew York City until 2005, when they relocated toDaytona Beach, Florida. She was diagnosed withpseudobulbar palsy in 2008[1] and died ofdementia complications in 2011.[10]
{{cite encyclopedia}}:Missing or empty|title= (help) andSeltzer, Robert M., ed. (1989).Religions of Antiquity. Macmillan.ISBN 978-0028973739.