Gail Mccabe Thesis

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Morphing the Crone: An Ethnography of Crone


Culture, Consciousness and Communities, a feminist participatory
action research project

Gail Cecile Lewis McCabe

A thesis submitted to the Faculty of Graduate Studies in


partial fulfilment of the requirements
for the degree of
Doctor of Philosophy
Graduate Programme in Sociology
York University
Toronto, Ontario
November, 2004

Abstract
The departure for this thesis was my own experience of metamorphosis or morphing a
Crone identity as I approached the menopause. Having discovered other women who
shared my language and experience as well as a thick web of Crone connections in
cyberspace, I undertook a critical ethnography of Crone culture, consciousness and
communities to investigate the question, What is the nature of Crone metamorphosis?.
The study was conducted from a feminist critical cultural studies framework meshing
standpoint theory with the research strategies of participatory action research and
traditional ethnographic methods. The results indicate that the morphing of Crones can
be understood as a complex transformation in identity encompassing the social
psychological, corporeal and cognitive dimensions of consciousness and lived
experience. As an effect of second wave feminist movement, the Crone now surfaces in
popular consciousness as an archetype, a cultural icon, a role model and feminist ideal
type for women in later life. While Crone-identification by definition is the result of
collective resistance to the pejorative constructions of old women framed in dominant
culture, it also represents a transformation in the individuals sense of self, their personal
relationships, their life aspirations and the decisions they make regarding their life
circumstances. Thus I found two separate yet intertwined meanings embedded in Crone
identification and the concept of morphing the Crone. Feminists are morphing the Crone
as a political project with the goal of socio-cultural transformation of a context that
marginalizes girls and women across the lifespan; individual women as they encounter
the challenges of aging are morphing the Crone as a project of self-definition and

vi

personal empowerment. In order to make that interpretation, I established a research


website, The Crone Project, and made connections with Crones in cyberspace and in
actual space at Crone gatherings. Crone-identified women were invited to join in the
participatory action research component of the study through a cyberspace forum,
[email protected], which I conceptualized as a cyberspace community drawing on the
work of feminist philosopher, Hilda Lindemann Nelson regarding communities of choice,
moral self-definition and the telling of counterstories. Data was analyzed using grounded
theory methodology and the constant comparison of data. This study can be located
within the fields of Sociology of the Body, Aging and Power as it examines the ways that
the body becomes the bearer of cultural meanings and the way that social actors take up
those meanings and live through them. In that regard, it reflects on the mesh between
agency and structure, consciousness and communities and examines the way social actors
are empowered to take up strategic identities, Crone, for example, as a means of
negotiating the interaction order. My study suggests that Crone communities structured
by relations of interdependence and an ethics of care provide the resources for Croneidentified women to become at long last self-defining.

vii

Acknowledgements
I had the good fortune or good judgement to send a child through doctoral studies
before me. Dr. Randi McCabe blazed a trail and then provided intellectual and emotional
guidance for my own intellectual adventure. Likewise, my daughter, Kathleen McCabe
shared her exceptional logistical skills and resources in solving a multitude of difficult
problems that saw this work through to completion.
I am truly grateful for the intellectual support and professional guidance of my
dissertation supervisor, Dr. Barbara Hanson and my committee, Dr. Norene Pupo, and
Dr. Stuart Schoenfeld. Their insistence on excellence inspired me to stretch beyond the
limits of my own imagination. I also appreciate the contributions of a community of
scholars, whose insights and comments contributed to the development of my thinking.
The comments and questions from Susan McDaniel, Cliff Jansen, Saroj Chawla, Louise
Ripley, Lorna Weir, Michael Lanphier, Oscar Wolfman, Deborah Davidson and Gregory
Malszecki provided new lenses from which to consider my analyses.
Above all, this thesis was a collaborative effort and the satisfaction of morphing
the Crone in print is due to the creativity, talent, and commitment of the many, many
wonderful, Wise Women Crones, Raging Grannies, Amazing Greys, Grey Panthers and
Elder Spinsters who shared their stories, their recipes, their aches and pains, their losses,
their humour and above all their wisdom throughout the process. Special thanks go to my
dedicated Crone collaborators, Edna Toth, Suzanne Peters, Audrey Tokiwa, Mary Brewin
Lewis and Brian Percheson.

viii

I would also like to acknowledge the many men in my life, whether Coots,
Cronies or Curmudgeons, their commitment to me never flagged: Paul McCabe, Marty
Lewis, Bruce Lewis, Tony McCabe, and Marc St. Jean provided essential emotional and
financial support. I am also indebted to Dr. Will Harper, for his generosity in providing
me with a room of my own, high above the hustle and bustle of the streets below. This
was a silent sanctuary where my ideas could bud and bloom with a life force akin to the
changing seasons unfolding outside the little window overlooking the mountain.
At the last, I must confess that in the wee hours of the morning when I was
deeply in doubt, and asking why me, I could hear my mothers voice echoing out of the
star spangled abyss because you can she whispered. So I dedicate this work to her,
Sara Salkin Lewis.

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Table of Contents
Title Page
Copyright Page ...
Certificate Page
Abstract ...
Acknowledgements...
Table of Contents..
List of Illustrations ...

(i)
(ii)
(iii)
(iv)-(v)
(vi)-(vii)
(viii)-(x)
(xi)

1. INTRODUCTION: COMING TO CRONE CONSCIOUSNESS

Crone Voices: The Meaning of the Crone ..


Enter the Crone! ..
A Study of Contemporary Crones ..
Research Design and Objectives...
From Crone Archetype to Contemporary Crone .
The Crone Archetype
The Contemporary Crone..
Morphing the Crone: A Theory of Personal and Social Transformation ...
The Argument in Brief .
Crone Metamorphosis...
Coming to Critical Consciousness ...
Conscious Aging and Conscious Aging Activism ..
Conceptual Frameworks .
A Critical Cultural Studies Approach to Culture and Identities ..
Feminist Cultural Analysis ..
The Sociological Problem: Womens Experience Of Social Invisibility .
Towards a Sociology of the Body, Power, and Aging

2
3
6
7
8
9
10
16
17
18
19
21
23
23
27
30
36

2. THEORY: CONCEPTUALIZING CRONE MORPHING

44

Crone Voices: Invisibility

45

Making Sense of Crone Morphs ..


Conceptualizing Social Invisibility..
Social Invisibility as Symbolic Annihilation
Social Invisibility Turned Inside Out
Social Invisibility as Erasure
The Lived Experience of Social Invisibility ...
Morphing the Crone: From Abject Old Woman to Powerful Crone ..
Post-modern Subjectivities
Strategic Identities.
Coming to Critical Consciousness...
Taking a Crone Standpoint
The Negation of Identity...

46
47
47
48
49
50
52
53
55
58
60
61

Crone Subjectivity.
Conscious Aging and Conscious Aging Activism...
The Dynamics of Transformation: Power, Community and Care ...
The Erotic as Power..
Telling Counterstories as Feminist Praxis....
Rethinking an Ethics of Care for Crone Communities.....
Queering the Heterosexual Binary..

62
64
68
69
72
76
82

3. METHODS: SEEKING THE CRONE

85

Crone Voices: Calling All Crones!....

86
87
88
90
90
91
94
97
98
99
100
100
100
101
107
108
108
109
111
117
119
122

Crone Collaborations
Feminism as a Politic of Research...
Research Strategies...
Feminist Participatory Action Research...
Feminist Ethnography...
Cyberspace Ethnography..
Crone Population and Particulars ..
Sample Rationale and Demographics...
Space and Time.
Research Questions ...
Data Collection Methods ..
The Crone Project.
Participant Observation.
Content Analysis...
Analytical Frameworks
Unit of Analysis
Intersubjectivity.
Grounded Theory Analysis...
Verification of Interpretation..
Ethical Considerations .
Limitations .

4. DISCUSSION: CRONE CONSCIOUSNESS


AND COMMUNITIES
Crone Voices: A Cackle of Crones.
Evolving Consciousness and Communities
Communications and Networks
Vision, Identity and Purpose.
Crone Spinsters and Web Weavers...
Birthing the Contemporary Crone.
A Crones Credo...
The Crones Cottage.
Crone Communities in Virtual and Actual Space.
Gathering the Crones in Cyberspace
Cyberspace Communities..
Crone Communities in Actual Space
Crone Gatherings and Wisdom Circles..

125
126
127
127
129
131
132
133
134
136
137
138
144
147

xi

Imaging the Crone Collectively


Crones Counsel VII: Honouring the Storyteller
The Meaning of the Crone

5. DISCUSSION: CRONE CULTURE, CONSCIOUS AGING


AND ACTIVISM
Crone Voices: Sticking Your Neck Out...
Sticking Your Neck Out
Social Invisibility...
Constituting Crone Culture and Communities..
Crones and Archetypes.
Conscious Aging: Coming to Crone Consciousness
Symbols, Rituals and Passages
The Circle.
Talking Sticks and Broomsticks
Drumming Rituals.
Naming and Claiming...
Webcrones Stories
The Community Counterstory: Loving the Crone Body..
Coming Out Counterstories and Conscious Aging Activism.
Coming Out Counterstories

6. MORPHING THE CRONE: TRANSFORMING THE SELF


AND THE SOCIAL

147
153
164

166
167
168
169
172
174
178
183
183
185
186
188
199
202
205
211

213

Morphing the Crone .


Crone Metamorphosis: From Abject Old Woman to Powerful Crone.
Making Sense of Crone Culture, Consciousness and Communities.
Significance of the Study for Sociology and Feminist Praxis

214
215
215
218
225

REFERENCES..

228

APPENDIX I: METHODOLOGICAL PARTICULARS.


APPENDIX II: ETHICAL DOCUMENTATION.

238
243

Crone Voices: A Crone Manifesto..

xii

List of Illustrations
1. BOULDER CRONE ..

135

2. ANACORTESBAYBUNS..

135

3. THE GREAT HAG OF THE WEST .

151

4. MYSTICAL CRONE QUEEN .

152

5. AGING GRACE-FULLY CRONE

152

1. INTRODUCTION
Coming to Crone Consciousness

The Meaning of the Crone


Raging Gran, webcrones posting
Excerpted from the Parliament Hill Mob Songbook
Sung by the Raging Grannies to the tune of Frre Jacques
Saving Money/Saving money
is our aim, is our aim
The future's bright and sunny
for folks with lots of money.
Some don't have.
What a shame.
Health and homecare/health and homecare
cut way back/ cut way back
Those Saintly Older Women
Will keep the system swimming
We know this.
For a fact.
Yoo hoo, all you, politicians
You may find, the going rough:
We Saintly Older Women
Are planning revolution
We're smart, we're mad.
And we're tough.
And we say
ENOUGH'S ENOUGH!

ENTER THE CRONE!


Not so many years ago, I began to call myself a Crone, usually when introducing myself
to some new acquaintance. This declaration was made rather sheepishly with a little
deprecating chuckle, as in Im Gail McCabe, a Crone, you see, heh, heh, heh . My
concept of a Crone at that time was not at all flattering. A Crone was a wretched, old
woman; a warty witch with wrinkles and toothless grin.1, 2 Since I did not look or feel
like that, my new introduction set me to wondering about the source of my new definition
of self. What exactly did I mean when I called myself a Crone? How did this identity
enter my consciousness and why should I describe myself in this ostensibly pejorative
fashion?
At an opportune time in my graduate studies, I conducted a small pilot study to
examine these questions. I began by surfing through cyberspace looking for Crone
traces. This was my introduction to a thick web of Crone connections, websites, mailing
lists, bulletin boards and chat rooms mounted by self-proclaimed technoCrones,
cyberGrannies and Crone-identified women. Many sites had a page of well-travelled
hyperlinks to other Crone sites.3 A high end glossy magazine, Crone Chronicles,
publishing quarterly with a circulation of >10,000 was dedicated to re-activating the
archetype of the Crone within contemporary western culture acting as both catalyst and
1

Crone (krn) n. An ugly, withered old woman; a hag. [Middle English, from Old North French carogne,
carrion, cantankerous woman, from Vulgar Latin *carnia, carrion, from Latin carn-, carn-, flesh] The
American Heritage Dictionary (3rd Edition, 1994)
2
Crones. The Great Hags of history, when their lives have not been prematurely terminated have lived to
be Crones. . . . They are the Survivors of the perpetual witchcraze of patriarchy, the Survivors of The
Burning Times (Mary Daly, 1978, 16 in Kramerae and Treichler, 1989:111)
3
I assess the level of hyperlink travel from the census taking tools, which count visitors to a site and are a
feature of many of these web pages as well as the many requests I had to add such links to my own page.

conduit for Crone networking (Crone Chronicles, Spring 2000:4).4 Two national
organizations in the U.S., the Crones Counsel and the International Association of Wise
Women also known as International Council of Grandmothers and Crones, host annual
conferences for Crones, and several older womens groups integrated aspects of Crone
culture in their activities. A sampling of these includes the Amazing Greys, a
Vancouver-based social group for older women; the Raging Grannies, a political action
street theatre group; and the Crone of Puget Sound, a Seattle-based organization
dedicated to deconstructing stereotypes of old women and supporting individual women
to develop new more powerful identities (Crone Connection, 2002:2).
The findings of the pilot project indicated a vibrant if loosely connected network
of aging women linked through the sign of the Crone sparking the doctoral project that
culminates in this thesis. The metaphor of morphing, an abbreviated version of the term
metamorphosis surfaced in many of the websites and discussions resonating with my
own definitions of a transforming self. 5 Metamorphosis is an apt metaphor for the
change experienced by women around and about the menopause. The corporeal
transitions of menopause are somewhat akin to the remarkable transformation in form
and structure occurring in certain animal species as part of the developmental cycle.
Unlike the metamorphosis of animals, however, the corporeal transformations of the

As of June 5, 2001, Crone Chronicles became an e-zine publishing only through the internet with
objectives revised to assist crone networking, strengthen and expand crone community. Back issues of
the print version of Crone Chronicles are still available for purchase through their website.
5
Just prior to conducting the pilot study, I had written a paper theorizing the aging experience as gender
metamophosis and so, I was delighted to discover the term used liberally by other women.

menopause have cognitive and social psychological implications as well as physiological


ones. Those dual transformations became the substance for this investigation beginning
with the defining question, What is the nature of Crone metamorphosis? As the
ethnographic project that culminates in this thesis began to take shape and my
understanding of Crone metamorphosis increased, I added the question How do Croneidentified women make sense of Crone consciousness, culture and communities?6
In this introductory chapter, I provide a general description of the research design
and objectives grounding the study in feminist scholarship; a description of the Crone
archetype and the contemporary Crone; an overview of the theoretical formulation and a
discussion of the conceptual frameworks that ground it; a statement of the sociological
problem informed by a review of literature; and a discussion of the theoretical objectives
and relevance of the study for feminist theory and for a sociology of the body, power and
aging. The second chapter sets out the theoretical formulation derived from grounded
theory methodology and feminist scholarship. The third chapter examines
methodological issues, political, philosophical and ethical considerations as well as the
sample, methods, and limitations of the study. In the fourth and fifth chapters, I set out
the findings and analysis drawing together the themes, patterns and elements that
constitute Crone culture and communities and by extension, a Crone consciousness and
identity in the world. In the concluding chapter, I revisit the research questions and
discuss the significance of the study for feminist praxis and sociological scholarship.

Here I use the term communities to encompass a range of crone collectives including counsels; wisdom
circles; consciousness-raising, conversation, educational groups and the like.

A STUDY OF CONTEMPORARY CRONES


I begin by locating my inquiry within the broad range of feminist scholarship. The
methods and objectives of the study are in keeping with feminist approaches to theory
with the defining construct of feminist praxis, thoughtful reflection and action
[occurring] simultaneously underpinning all (Kirby and McKenna, 1989:34). The point
of departure for feminist research is the sexed body and the social construction of gender
in its effects in determining the social position of women [Lovell in Turner, 1996:310].
Feminist standpoint theory, then, provides a useful way of thinking about the social position of Crones, and I take a Crone standpoint in my analysis of Crone metamorphosis,
which I characterize through the constructs of morphing, conscious aging and conscious
aging activism (Smith, 1990, 1987; Hartsock, 1996, 1983, 1983b). Morphing is a
sensitizing construct used by Crone-identified women to characterize the process of a
transforming identity.7 Conscious aging is a sensitizing construct used by Croneidentified women to describe the process of coming to Crone consciousness and taking a
Crone standpoint. Conscious aging activism is a concept derived from grounded theory
analysis to reflect the forms of resistance and insubordination that Crone women engage
in as an outcome of conscious aging.
My approach to conceptualizing Crone consciousness, culture and communities is
informed by the perspectives of feminist critical cultural studies, a hybrid of feminist
cultural analysis and critical cultural studies. The conscious aging of Crone-identified
7

Sensitizing concept is the term Blumer used for concepts that are conceived of by social analysts as they
begin to generalize from data (Blumer, 1954:7 in van den Hoonard, 1997:3). The identification and
application of sensitizing concepts is a key strategy for analysis of my data and I expand more fully on it in
the methods chapter.

women in Crone communities exemplifies an interdependent model of social relations


expanding the scholarship of feminists relative to power and an ethics of care (Allen,
1999; Gatens, 1996; French, 1994; Hartsock, 1983;1996; Lorde, 1984;1988; Frye, 1983).
I also draw on the work of feminist philosopher, Hilda Lindemann Nelson. Nelsons
conceptual framework links the processes of moral self-definition in communities of
choice structured by interdependence and an ethics of care with empowerment and
resistance in communities of place, structured by relations of dominance and
subordination and an ethics of rights and justice. Communities of place are structured on
the basis of geography, most often defining membership by social status, shared values,
beliefs, and experience. Communities of choice are constituted on the basis of shared
vision and purpose while difference in experience is often valued as a source of wisdom,
insight and expertise. I have applied Nelsons construct of the chosen community to
conceptualize Crone meetings, gatherings and wisdom circles. Nelsons framework
identifies the potential for Crone culture and communities to initiate personal and social
transformation in communities of place (Nelson, 1995; 1999).

Research Design and Objectives


This study can be characterized as critical ethnography: ethnography in the sense that I
conducted field studies at Crone gatherings employing traditional ethnographic methods,
participant observation, focus groups, interviews and content analyses to describe and
make sense of Crone consciousness, culture and communities; critical in the sense that
these elements evolve from feminist counterculture movement, particularly, the Womens
Liberation Movement that surfaced in the 1960s. Given this insight, the study that began

as an ethnographic exploration was reframed to include a critical participatory activist


dimension in which participants collaborated with me through a cyberspace community
forum, [email protected] (webcrones) to address the objectives of the study, to
explore and describe some of the constituent elements of Crone culture, and communities
in order to understand how Crone-identified women make sense of Crone metamorphosis
and conscious aging. Likewise workshops at Crones Counsel, an organization hosting
semi-annual gatherings of Crone-identified women were structured as focus groups
within a participatory action framework.

FROM CRONE ARCHETYPE TO


CONTEMPORARY CRONE
The story of the contemporary Crone begins with the abjection or diminished status of
old women within western patriarchal culture. For example, social historian, David
Fischer, chronicles the process of diminishing the status of old women through manmade language (Spender, 1985):
virtually every term of abuse used for old women appears to be as old as the
English language itself. Hag was a common term in the14th century. It was used
to describe a woman suspected of practicing witchcraft, and also any repulsive
and ugly old woman. Crone is equally antique (Fischer, 1978:92).

In recognition of this abjection of old women, feminists of the second wave defined a
need for cultural representations of old women that might counter the dominant discourse
from western industrial capitalist patriarchal culture.8 At the same time, many second
wave feminists were rejecting institutionalized religion and a vibrant feminist spirituality
8

Second wave feminists also emphasized the marginal status of women in general across the lifespan as
well as the social invisibility of older women.

movement was emerging. Much of that movement centred on reclaiming a valued female
deity, the Goddess or Crone archetype.

The Crone Archetype


Barbara Walker, who has made the archaeology of womens spirituality her scholarly
pursuit, provides a vivid description of the Crone, the third aspect of the triple goddess:
Crone is the power, passion, and purpose of ancient female wisdom the
crowning phase of the ancient Triple Goddess: Maiden/Mother/Crone The
Crones title was related to the word crown and she represented the power of the
ancient tribal matriarch who made the moral and legal decisions for her subject
and descendants (Walker in Crones Counsel FAQ, Crones Counsel website).

Walker expands on the three aspects of the goddess in order to characterize the Crone
as a powerful, independent entity advising feminists to seek a new world order:
not in the fear of God, but in the still unknown meanings of the old, grim
Goddess who represented fear itself. She is the one we most need to understand:
not the pretty Virgin; not the fecund Mother; but the wise, wilful, wolfish Crone
(Walker, 1985:12-13).

Walkers book, The Crone, is by far the most definitive work on the Crone archetype,
although there is a considerable body of work, both scholarly and popular in nature
regarding feminist spirituality, the goddess and her three dimensions.
In her groundbreaking essay, Why Women Need the Goddess: Phenomenological, Psychological and Political Reflections, Carol Christ explains the second wave
feminist turn to goddess worship as an expression of womens need for spiritual inclusion
in the face of Judaeo-Christian traditional readings of womens corporeality as more
carnal, fleshy, and earthy than the culture-creating males (in Christ and Plaskow

10

1992:279).9 She uses an evocative quote to convey the move from despair to joy
experienced with the recognition of self as sacred:
At the close of Ntozake Shanges stupendously successful Broadway play For
Colored Girls Who Have Considered Suicide when the Rainbow is Enuf, a tall
beautiful black woman rises from despair to cry out, I found God in myself and
I loved her fiercely (Christ in Christ and Plaskow, 1992:273).

Above all, feminist resurrections of the Goddess aim to ground the process of naming
and reclaiming the female body and its cycles and processes (Ibid.:281). This process is
accomplished symbolically through the configuration of the Goddess as a sacred trinity:
maiden, mother, and crone reflecting the culturally defined roles for women at various
stages of the lifespan, youth, maturity and later life (Ibid.:281). However, unlike the
patriarchal abject old woman, the post-menopausal Crone, as an entity of feminist
counterculture embodies the qualities of age, wisdom and power (Walker, 1985). From a
sociological perspective, the Crone can be figured as a feminist ideal type old woman.
From a political and social psychological perspective, the Crone has entered popular
consciousness as an archetype, a cultural icon and a role model for women in later life.

The Contemporary Crone


The following description of women who identify with or as a Crone was derived through
participant observation, interviews and focus groups at Crone gatherings as well as
content analyses of Crone publications and websites. The webcrones cyberspace
community provides, by far, the richest source of data for this description since
9

There are innumerable eloquent interdisciplinary scholarly and popular articles, essays and books
documenting the womens spirituality movement as well as the turn to goddess worship, practice and ritual.
I have limited my citations to Christ and Walker, since they have a particular relevance to my investigation
of contemporary Crone culture, consciousness and communities.

11

participants were enjoined to introduce themselves, whenever a newcomer joined the


community. Therefore, sandwiched between postings on a broad range of topics are many
descriptions of self that taken together provide a distinct picture of the Crone. The
process of generalizing a description of the group of women who constitute themselves as
Crones is bound to efface the uniqueness of individuals. Nevertheless, for the purpose of
characterizing women who might adopt a Crone standpoint, it is useful to consider the
common ground that draws these women together. I discuss individual perspectives and
points of divergence within the community of Crones at length in the findings and
discussion chapters.
As to the question of how to qualify as a Crone, there is a lack of clarity and
agreement. When I posed the question to webcrones and the Crones Counsel
participants, I garnered a range of responses. If one were to use age as the determinant of
Crone status, 57 years seemed to be a marker for some of the Crones Counsel
participants. On that point, a webcrones posting quoted H.L. Mencken: No matter how
long he lives, no man ever becomes as wise as the average woman of forty-eight. The
quote is instructive since it incorporates the corporeal dimension of the periomenopause,
the hold[ing] of blood as a determinant of wisdom, hence, Crone status (webcrones
posting; CCVII group three). At the same time, Crones Counsel women identified young
women to whom they would ascribe Crone status. For example, one womans
granddaughter was characterized as an old soul in a young body, because she had
wisdom of Crone dimensions (CCVII group three). Another woman confirmed this
insight, Shes a Crone for sure (Ibid.). In that particular focus group, the participants

12

concluded that age was no determinant of Crone. Rather, with typical Crone whimsy,
one of them recounted the logic in her Crone community:
grey hair doesnt count because some people dont have grey hair. And
wrinkles dont count becomes some people have more than others. And some of
them have more than they deserve. I earned every grey hair on my head. But we
decided that if you have to get up to go to the bathroom twice a night, then you
can be a Crone! (CCVII focus group one).

The following description reflects the contemporary vision of the Crone archetype
as posted on the Crones Counsel website:
A Crone may be a woman of any color, race, religion, sexual orientation,
economic status, educational level, lifestyle, or political persuasion. She may be
disabled or abled, introvert or extrovert, single, married, widowed, or partnered.
She is like you and me. What does set the Crone apart, however, is her
willingness to tell the truth about her life. (Crones Counsel website)

While this description of Crone possibilities is characterized by diversity,


reflecting the values and goals of contemporary feminist movement, I discovered a more
socially homogeneous group. In general, the women I observed in focus groups and
interviews, the women who subscribed to webcrones, the women who created Crone
websites on the World Wide Web, tend to be white, middle class, well-educated women.
Most have some post-secondary education, many with two and three degrees as well as
professional designations. They are doctors, social workers, nurses, high school teachers,
librarians, college teachers, published authors, Jungian therapists, addictions counsellors,
engineers, ministers and the like. Most of them are mothers and grandmothers. Some of
them are married or were married at some point in their life. Some of them have been
married several times. Some of them live in same-sex partnerships.
Many of these women are retired while others are still working in their respective
fields. Some of them are relatively affluent and able to live independently. A small

13

percentage define themselves as working class women while many others are living in
reduced circumstances in supportive housing or retirement homes as an effect of
widowhood, debility and the general lack of adequate pension benefits for women. The
Crones Counsel offers scholarships so that women living in reduced circumstances can
more readily attend gatherings. However, the scholarships cover only the registration
fees and the added costs of travel, food and accommodations are substantial. This limits
the accessibility of the Counsel for many women, although local groups should be able to
assemble a more diverse membership. Yet, local groups, the Crone of Puget Sound,
Raging Grannies, and Amazing Greys seem to reflect the same economic, racial, and
educational demographics and it is these same groups who organize the larger Counsels.
For example, the initial Crones Counsel was organized by two academics, Ann
Kreilkamp, founder and first editor of Crone Chronicles holds a PhD in the Philosophy of
Science from Boston University while Shauna Adix was the Director of the Women's
Center at the University of Utah for 20 years. Helen Redman, another contemporary
Crone leader, feminist artist and activist, is also university educated, white and middle
class. Redman organizes and conducts workshops and lectures on the Crone. Likewise,
there are many Crone academics like myself who are doing graduate degrees, some of
them focussing directly on the Crone and the Crones Counsel. One of these academics is
a Native Canadian woman working out of the University of Victoria who connected with
me online to discuss Crone identifications. She has since completed a masters thesis
with a focus on Crones and rites of passage (Peekeekoot, 2001). There is also a small
contingent of Native American women who are involved in local Crone groups in the

14

southwest United States and two Native women who are very active on the Crones
Counsel board. Nevertheless, their participation is atypical.
In February 2000, concerned by the racial homogeneity in Crone circles, I invited
a black woman of my acquaintance to visit The Crone Project website and if she was
interested to subscribe to the webcrones mailing list. She was a woman in her mid-50s, a
survivor of cancer looking for some low maintenance intellectual interaction. I cannot
say if she ever visited the site. I can say of certainty that she did not subscribe to the
mailing list. On webcrones, there has been little discussion relative to racial diversity.
Economic disparity has surfaced more often as a source of tension exemplified in the
following posting:
One thing I see missing in a lot of the literature on Crones is a focus on older
women who live in poverty status. Like me, for example! (Waylaid out of the
workforce by disability and living on a very small disability income.) Then
there are the many women who simply outlived their non-wealthy husbands and
are living only on social security having to decide whether to buy medicine or
groceries. Or women who have retired without savings for one reason or
another. (Many like me, were single parents who simply could not save enough
on our income for a decent retirement.). Our choices for our conscious croning
projects are much limited to things that do not cost money, which leaves out a
return to college, etc. And MANY, MANY if not most of this group do
not have, or cannot afford, this wonderful thing called the internet, which has
made such a difference in my life! Im wondering how we can reach out to
bring more of these women in to the fold of Crones? (webcrones posting).

It seems to follow that Crone-identified women wield a measure of social power


by virtue of their education, careers and access to material resources that effectively
results in the exclusion of various constituencies of women, women with limited material
resources, black women and women of colour. While their absence can be attributed to a
cluster of factors, there is no doubt that these constituencies have been historically
disempowered and the powerful Crone may hold little potential or appeal for them as a

15

strategic identity. Of certainty, the very nature of cultural diversity is such that these
women may have little inclination to come out as Crones, a cultural icon that does not fit
within their cultural framework or resonate with their lived experience. This is a
challenge for Crone-identified women who espousing a feminist politic envision a more
diverse community of Crones. The challenge goes to bridging the barriers and gaps
among women in order to make the necessary connections and to develop solidarity
despite difference. Framing the departure for Crone-identification as a willingness to
speak the truth about your life is a beginning (Crones Counsel website). It must not be
conceived of as an end in itself. This is a familiar dilemma for second wave feminists
that remains as challenging to these women in their old age as it was in their youth.
The most substantial demographic departure amongst Crones goes to sexual
orientation. There are many lesbians subscribed to the webcrones community; at least,
equal if not greater numbers of lesbians than heterosexual women. In addition, many
women have come out as lesbians on webcrones. It is a space that allows women the
latitude to think about coming out tentatively in safe stages. Likewise, Crones Counsel is
also a queer positive space prompting this comment: Its the first place Ive ever been
in where straight women and lesbian women seem to get on without the tensions that are
often in that space and Ive been in that space a lot (CCVII group three). This is not to
say that Crones are by definition lesbians or vice versa, but rather that the social
invisibility experienced by lesbians across the lifespan is also experienced by
heterosexual women around and about the menopause such that they are more likely to
share common ground at this point in the life course. Feminist scholars have noted that

16

women as a recognizable group are less visible than their male counterparts as a
function of sexism. However, this invisibility is so exacerbated in the case of lesbians and
older women that it bears analysis and figures in my understanding of Crone morphing. I
expand further on the concept of social invisibility as well as the resonance between
Crones and lesbians where applicable in this thesis.

MORPHING THE CRONE: A THEORY OF


PERSONAL AND SOCIAL TRANSFORMATION
The theoretical formulation elaborated here was derived through grounded theory
methodology (Charmaz, 2000; Rennie, 1998, 2000; van den Hoonard, 1997; Babchuk,
1997; Strauss and Corbin, 1990, 1994; Glaser, 1992; Kirby and McKenna, 1989; Glaser
and Strauss, 1967). Following the precepts of grounded theory, I began by investigating
the social phenomenon of Crone identification. In keeping with feminist methodology,
my interest was grounded in my own experience and that of other women. As the study
unfolded, theoretical concepts were derived from the constant comparison of data
collected with mixed methods across numerous sites. Grounded theory analysis located
the study in the fields of body, power and aging and I drew upon feminist and
sociological scholarship in these areas to develop a theory of Crone morphing.
My intention in elaborating this theory is not to preclude the possibility of other
theories that might be developed from subsets of data collected for this study. There is
scope for examining a number of issues relative to aging, grief and loss, widowhood, and
social isolation, for example. That I put forward this particular theory goes to my research

17

questions and academic interests as well as the insights of the participants in the study.
Since this is a participatory action research project, the theory has evolved from the
constant comparison of data with concepts scrutinized by the participants in a dialogical
process. No single reading, my own or that of any one participant, can possibly
encompass the range of interpretations on any one theme. Therefore, while my goal has
been to weave these interpretations together to put forward a fuller understanding of
Crone morphing, I have also included readings against the grain to reflect a broader range
of interpretations for the data. These I discuss in the findings and discussion chapters.

The Argument in Brief


In this thesis, I argue that Crone metamorphosis is a complex transformation in identity
experienced by some women around and about the menopause, from abject old woman to
powerful Crone. This transformation of identity encompasses social psychological,
corporeal and cognitive dimensions. As an effect of second wave feminist movement,
the Crone now surfaces in popular consciousness as an archetype, a cultural icon, a role
model and feminist ideal type for women in later life. While Crone-identification by
definition is the result of collective resistance to the pejorative constructions of old
women framed in dominant culture, it also represents a transformation in the individuals
sense of self, their personal relationships, their life aspirations and the decisions they
make regarding their life circumstances. Thus I find two separate yet intertwined
meanings embedded in Crone identification and the concept of morphing the Crone.
Feminists are morphing the Crone as a political project with the goal of socio-cultural

18

transformation; individual women as they encounter the challenges of aging are


morphing the Crone as a project of self-definition and personal empowerment.

Crone Metamorphosis
This study began with the question, What is the nature of Crone metamorphosis?
While the corporeal transformations of the menopause are observable as wrinkles,
graying hair and other signs on the body, the social implications of womens aging are
not so apparent. Nevertheless, aging women in the Crone population also experience a
transformation in social status, which I have conceptualized as social invisibility and
personified through the construct of the abject old woman.
The term abject is defined in Merriam Webster as sunk to or existing in a low
state or condition. It goes almost without saying that the aging experience of individual
women is mitigated by the confluence of many factors, temperament, class, ethnicity,
race, ability, occupation, marital status and social networks for example. Therefore, my
construct of the abject old woman personifies their status not as individuals but in a more
general sense as a cultural group. By that I mean that abjection is a socially constructed
condition that frames the experience of aging women as a group, as opposed to any
individual perception of lived experience. Almost without exception, participants in this
study reported the experience and effects of social invisibility in their lives. Their reports
differ markedly in their perception of their experience. These I discuss at length in the
findings and discussion chapters. The construct of the abject old woman as a cultural

19

representation is useful as a point of departure for Crone morphing. The powerful Crone
is the antithesis of the abject old woman.
Underlying the metamorphosis to abject old woman is the cultural tradition that
ascribes meaning and value to women on the basis of their reproductive capacities and
casts them as obsolete at the menopause. The morphing of Crones is thus conceptualized
as a further transformation, a strategic self-transformation with social psychological
dimensions that moves the individual from abject old woman to powerful Crone, woman
of age, wisdom and power. Underlying this second transformation is a dual intention:
resistance to the dominant cultural traditions that define and reduce womens experience
across the lifespan to reproductive roles and transformation of the cultural formation and
structural relations of power that marginalize womens experience of the self and the
social culminating in the social invisibility of old women. From a social psychological
perspective, women morph the Crone in a process of self-definition locating the sacred
self lost to them around and about the menarche.

Coming to Critical Consciousness


The process by which the transformation of identity is accomplished goes to my second
question, How do Crone women make sense of Crone consciousness, culture and
communities? Here, I argue that the emergence of Crone consciousness, culture and
community is directly related to idea of feminist praxis, thoughtful reflection and
practical action taken together, evolving from the second wave feminist counterculture
movements of the 1960s. These movements were aimed at transforming the personal and

20

the political, the self and the society in which girls, women and Crones reside. The
social system or sociocultural formation in question is Western culture framed by
industrial capitalism and patriarchy. I also refer to this social system as dominant culture
or dominant reality throughout this thesis. The self or identity at issue is that of woman as
she is socially defined within dominant culture.
My findings and analysis suggest that the morphing of Crones, individual and
collective is a strategic process by which the cohort of women who were influenced by
second wave feminist counterculture now seek to resolve the symbolic and social
contradictions experienced around and about the menopause at the same time as they
engage in collective action for socio-cultural transformation. As such, the morphing of
Crones is the core concept for making sense of Crone consciousness, culture and
communities. The method by which the second wave feminist counterculture engendered
transformation was feminist consciousness-raising conducted in groups or communities
organized for that purpose. Radical feminist Catherine MacKinnon provides a definitive
explanation of the method:
As Marxist method is dialectical materialism, feminist method is consciousness
raising: the collective critical reconstitution of the meaning of womens social
experience, as women live through it. (1989:83).

McKinnon characterizes the consciousness raising process [as] transformative as well


as perceptive and therefore, the pursuit of consciousness becomes a form of political
practice since it seeks to get at the ideologies that underpin everyday life and to revalue
those goods that have been constructed as spoiled (1989:84). While individual women
who participate in Crone communities may differ in their definition of the situation, and

21

hold varying degrees of commitment to Crone conscious aging and conscious aging
activism, they are nevertheless by their presence participating in the collective
imagination of the Crone as a powerful cultural icon and by their individual actions they
are representing old women as powerful beings in dominant reality. This meets the
criteria for a feminist praxis: in the action of representing themselves powerfully, they
expose the ideological meanings embedded in the (mis)representations or absent
representations of old women in dominant culture.

Conscious Aging and Conscious Aging Activism


I argue that social invisibility around and about the menopause motivates some women to
participate in consciousness raising, leading to action and activism that results in
transformation. Transformation occurs at the level of community through the symbiotic
processes of conscious aging and conscious aging activism. Personal transformation is an
effect of conscious aging, coming to Crone consciousness, and acquiring a Crone
standpoint that enables the woman to be critical about her own situation, and the situation
of women within the web of social relationships that encompass womens lives. Social
transformation is an effect of conscious aging activism. Crone-identified women become
engaged in practical action and activist agendas that propagate the structural relations of
power and culture of Crone communities into the social structures of western industrial
capitalist patriarchy.
Conscious aging evolves in communities akin to feminist consciousness-raising
groups constituted by women at Crone gatherings, wisdom circles, clubs and counsels.

22

These are communities of choice, structured by interdependence and an ethics of care


with the collective and individual empowerment of the community as an outcome. These
structural and cultural conditions open a space for the telling of experiential stories, for
moral self-definition and for critical reflection. Through critical reflection of their
experiences Crones come to consciousness about the conditions that shape their everyday
lives and now engage in the telling of counterstories, stories that overwrite the discourse
of dominant culture that have mediated their lives in their communities of place. This is a
process of self-definition, the naming and reclaiming of self that empowers Crones to
redefine their roles and goals; to develop action plans that run counter to social
expectations for older women and women in general and to participate in conscious
aging activism through which they intend to transform cultural traditions and their
social world.
Conscious aging activism occurs when women are empowered to strive for
change in the communities of place in which they reside, work, and participate in
communal life, in social and personal relationships. Communities of place reflect the
structural relations of dominance and subordination and an ethics of rights and justice
that are characteristic of dominant culture and result in differential access and
opportunities to create the material and abstract social goods of the society. Croneidentified women seek transformation in these conditions through ongoing
consciousness-raising activities and activism within political, social, and cultural spheres
in these communities of place.

23

CONCEPTUAL FRAMEWORKS
It must be noted at the outset that culture is an exceedingly complex concept that resists
definition in the face of its dynamic qualities, fragmentation and the multiplicity of ways
that individuals perceive and situate themselves culturally and draw on their cultural
perceptions to motivate and make sense of their experience and actions. Likewise, culture
is defined differently relative to academic discipline or theoretical discourse. Since this
thesis is positioned within feminist critical cultural studies, I set out the precepts relative
to culture from that framework.

A Critical Cultural Studies Approach


To Culture and Identities
Stuart Hall at the vanguard of critical cultural studies, has argued that culture as a term of
reference has lost its signifier (in Hall and DuGay,1996:2-3). This destabilization of the
ground of culture can be seen as an effect not only of postcolonial, poststructural and
post-modern deconstructions of historical grand narratives but also of globalization, the
massive global flows of people, capital, and ideas that preclude the possibility of a
culture insulated from external intrusions (Mathews, 2000:3-4; Brah, 1996:1-16; Hall in
Hall and DuGay,1996:1-16). Indeed, the notion of culture as a global supermarket
where individuals shop the cultural shelves for artefacts and practices to be layered on
or off at will, while it frames culture and identity in the language of capitalist production
and consumption nevertheless lends itself to the notion of a culture of Crones (Isajiw,
1999:202; Mathews, 2000:21). A space is opened for thinking about how individuals

24

might construct identities as a mesh between a field of potentials and the significations of
place that are always already ascribed to particular bodies through culture (Goffman in
Lemert and Branaman, 1997:95-96; Hall in Hall and DuGay, 1996:5; Brah, 1996:8-10).10
OSullivan et al. in the dictionary of Key Concepts in Communication and
Cultural Studies now define culture as the social production and reproduction of sense,
meaning and consciousness, conceptualizing culture as a malleable concept to be
mobilized within particular discourses (1994, 68). This definition exemplifies the
detachment of culture from communities of place and alludes to both the complexity and
the political possibilities inherent in the construction of cultures and fashioning of
identities. As a basis for introducing feminist approaches to culture here, I briefly trace
the evolution of culture as a conceptual category and object of knowledge for academic
interest and particularly, the interests of critical cultural studies.

The Struggle for the Sign


Hebdige identifies two trajectories for cultural studies: one, an anthropological project
that seeks to clarify the meanings of values implicit and explicit in a particular way of
life, a particular culture, and two, the notion of culture as a standard of aesthetic
excellence, a project for poets and scholars alike (1991:5-6). This last has traditionally
been conceptualized as art and characterized as elite or high culture. The pairing of
culture with elitism suggests the connections between culture and class and the role of
politics in the construction of cultural meanings, values and practices. Thus critical
10

The notion of a global supermarket for cultural wares has its greatest purchase in developed countries
where modes of communication and ideal culture promote commodity consumption or, at least, are subject
to the commodification of what they perceive to be their own culture.

25

theorists have juxtaposed the notions of popular culture, folk culture and mass culture as
forms of popular or low culture against elite culture as the highest standard of aesthetic
excellence to get at the historical and political possibilities bundled into traditional and
contemporary readings of culture.
The distinctions between elite, folk, popular and mass culture are closely linked to
theories of social organization and change, such that a full elaboration goes beyond the
scope of this thesis (Strinati, 1995: 9). However, these distinctions are significant for
balancing the constraints of structural systems against the potential of social actors to
constitute culture through particular practices, tastes, styles, fashions and artefacts. So
some cultural theorists have argued that mass or popular culture has democratizing
potential since these cultural forms intervene in the class divisions and hierarchies that
have traditionally determined what stands for culture (Strinati, 1995:5-8). For example,
Hebdige argues that Style in subculture is pregnant with significance because it
allows for subversion of the dominant discourse or cultural consensus through control of
the sign (1991:18). In the case of this thesis, the Crone is the contested sign and the site
of struggle is the old womans body. At stake is the possibility for self-definition and
empowerment through the subversion of dominant discourses that connect women to
reproduction and by extension, devalue old women as obsolescent at the menopause.

Hegemonic Culture
The critical cultural theory approach to culture builds on Marxist and neo-Marxist
theories of ideology to integrate class as a key dimension of cultural analysis. Culture is
conceived of as a hegemonic production that elicits the acceptance of the ideas, values

26

and leadership of the dominant group with little resort to coercion or physical force
(Hebdige, 1991:6-7, 16; Strinati, 1995:166; Smith, 1987:19). In Gramscian terms,
hegemony prevails when the interests of dominant classes are taken up spontaneously as
the common sense wisdom of the masses. Hegemony is accomplished not so much by
design as by position with dominant groups controlling institutional and mass mediated,
image-based modes of cultural production, such that the ideological meanings encoded as
a function of the relations of production come to saturate the everyday world.11 Thus
French author, Roland Barthes, argued that modern society is
steeped in this anonymous ideology: our press, our films, our theatre, our pulp
literature, our rituals, our Justice, our diplomacy, our conversations, our remarks
about the weather, a murder trial, a touching wedding, the cooking we dream of,
the garments we wear, everything in everyday life is dependent on the
representation which the bourgeoisie has and makes us have of the relations
between men and the world. (Barthes in Hebdige, 1991:9).

Applying the principles of semiology, Barthes cultural analysis of the everyday


world exposes the ideological meanings captured in cultural representations, in both
material and abstract culture, discourses, objects and practices such that we recognize that
ideology thrives beneath consciousness (Hebdige, 1991:11). Cultural signs act upon us
through a process that escapes us since at the level of consciousness we understand them
to be only common sense (Ibid.:11). The argument from critical cultural theory, then, is
that signs and sign systems are only decipherable through a conscientious critical interrogation, a sort of planned digging at the roots of surface matters (Hebdige, 1991:12). That

11

There has been ext ensive scholarship in media and cultural studies that demonstrates the key role of
image-based culture in influencing and shaping cultural dimensions of the life world in developed nations.
For example, Sut Jhally, Professor of Communication, University of Massachusetts, Amherst found that
individuals in the West see on average approximately 3600 commercial images daily and this effectively
results in the colonization of culture for commercial and corporate interests (Jhally, 1997).

27

argument is key to my thesis, since I argue that morphing the Crone is a process of
coming to critical consciousness in order to take a Crone standpoint. This allows Croneidentified women to get at the roots of hegemonic cultural representations and take action
to subvert dominant discourses given through patriarchal capitalist culture.

Feminist Cultural Analysis


For the purposes of this thesis, culture is conceptualized within the discursive space of
feminist scholarship and particularly, the feminist cultural analyses made by radical and
socialist feminists in their critique of western industrial capitalist patriarchal culture.
Culture is conceptualized as the the site through which social relations are legitimated
and mystified, the site through which the social order is constructed, categorized,
experienced, regulated, and made meaningful and pleasurable (Birrell and Cole,
1994:100 in McCabe, 1997:5). Through culture the standpoint of men is represented as
universal and projected as womens reality (Smith, 1987:17-22; Spender, 1985[1980]:16). This condition has been maintained by womens exclusion from the making of
ideology, of knowledge, and of culture in all but the most limited and individual cases
and never as representative of female sex/gender (Smith, 1987:17-18). Rather culture has
been accessible to women only through a limited zone of consumption such that the
ways in which we think about ourselves and one another and about our society -- our
images of how we should look, our homes, our lives, even our inner worlds are shaped
by the ideological representations of a singularly patriarchal cultural formation emerging
with the development of a capitalist mode of production (Ibid.:17-18).

28

Feminist Critical Cultural Studies


Feminist critical cultural theorists now seek to redress the absence of sex/gender both in
the making of culture and in critical analyses of culture by placing women at the centre of
inquiry. At the same time, the recognition that sex/gender cannot be abstracted from the
whole complex of socially signifying categories constitutes a serious analytical and
political challenge to feminist theory that leads to the destabilization of the very bases of
solidarity. Hill Collins suggests that it is analytically unsound to conceive of gender,
race, class, age and other social markers as either biologically or culturally determined
identities, mutually exclusive social categories or distinctive social hierarchies (Hill
Collins, 1991:62). Rather they are better conceptualized as dynamic sets of intersecting
social relations shaped and structured by cultural norms, conventions, values, and
practices that mediate our everyday lives (Ibid.:62).
In order to make that critical analysis, feminist critical cultural theorists conceive
of culture as both abstract and concrete in its manifestation through everyday practices,
processes and discourses (McCabe, 1997:5). Through culture, our perceptions of the body
are shaped, constrained and inscribed. Sex/gender is (re)produced, naturalized and
confirmed through stereotypical and normative sexed or gendered practices and the
reiteration of signifying discourses as a process of cultural negotiation (Ibid.:5).12 By
cultural negotiation, I mean that the sexing of the body is a dynamic process, a lived
relation in which the embodied self participates by actively constructing the sexed self

12

Here discourse refers to the Foucauldian concept defined as sets of deep principles incorporating specific grids of
meaning which underpin, generate and establish relationships between all that can be seen, thought and said (Dreyfus
and Rabinow, 1982 and Foucault, 1974 in Shilling, 1993:75).

29

through the consumption and reproduction of identities, consciousness, and


subjectivities, that are represented to us through mass or popular culture (Althusser in
Birrell and Cole, 1994:12 in McCabe, 1997:6).

Contesting the Sign: From Crone Archetype to Cultural Icon


Since hegemony relies on the implicit consent of subordinate groups, Hall contends that it
is maintained only so long as the dominant classes succeed in framing all competing
definitions within their range (Hall in Hebdige, 1991, 16). In that way, subordinate
groups are not so much controlled as contained within an ideological space which does
not seem at all ideological: which appears to be permanent and natural, to lie outside
history, to be beyond particular interests (Hall in Hebdige, 1991:16). For example, the
emergence of the strong-woman-Amazon type in post-80s popular culture, Zena the
Warrior Woman, Lara Croft, Tomb Raider, the Spice Girls and the like can be understood
as the framing of feminist political desires and demands in a cultural product that still
manages to produce the female body as a sexualized object that conforms to the dominant
demands of capitalism and patriarchy (Rapping, Kuhn, Haskell in Hanson and Maxcy,
1996:273-295). Hegemony cannot be taken for granted but must be won, reproduced,
sustained through a continuous process of cultural negotiation that Gramsci
characterized as a moving equilibrium (Hall in Hebdige, 1991:16).
Culture and its products are always available for deconstruction and demystification through critical analyses. Moreover, cultural commodities can be symbolically
repossessed and invested with new and oppositional meanings by those groups from
which they originated (Ibid.:16). It is this process of repossession and reconstruction

30

that is at work in the feminist political project of morphing the Crone. The Crone as a
contested sign can be understood as the strong woman of feminist demands emerging
from outside of patriarchal hegemonic cultural representations, therefore positioned to
destabilize the heterosexual hierarchies that structure dominant culture by overwriting the
hegemonic narratives that contain and constrain women in the ideological space of
reproduction and exclude or marginalize her on those bases.

THE SOCIOLOGICAL PROBLEM: WOMENS


EXPERIENCE OF SOCIAL INVISIBILITY
Around and about the menopause, many women find themselves facing a double passage,
corporeal and social. The physical body is transformed through the period-menopause
marked by a range of visible signs such as graying hair, wrinkled faces, eye bags, dry
skin, liver spots and thickening bodies (Chrisler and Ghiz, 1993:69-72). The corporeal
transformations of menopause have been pathologized in western industrial capitalist
patriarchal traditions (Martin, 1992:173-177; Ussher, 1989:104-114; Fausto-Sterling,
1999 169-178; Gannon, 1998:105-104). The result if that post-menopausal women are
constructed as unproductive, spoiled goods to be set aside like a shameful secret that is
unseemly to mention (de Beauvoir, 1972b:1). Maguires research suggests that the
construction of older women through pejorative labels like old bag, crone, and
mutton dressed as lamb tend to conflate the symbolic meaning of woman with youth,
femininity, beauty and sexuality (Maguire, 1995:559). In consequence, images of older
women in patriarchal culture are scarce and those we do see are mainly of a commercial

31

nature calling for women to resist the scourge of age with the application of wrinkle
creams, vigorous exercise and cosmetic surgeries (Abu Laban and McDaniel in Mandell,
1995:111-114; Arber and Ginn, 1991:41-43, 47; Gee and Kimball, 1987:106; Itzin,
1986:119). This effect compounds ageism with sexism and reflects the need for gendered
analyses of aging (McDaniel, 1988:18; Arber and Ginn, 1991, 1995; Browne, 1998;
Onyx et al, 1999). In commercial advertisements, the models representing old women
belie any claim to old age, their youthful appearance supporting instead the claims of
marketers regarding their products. McDaniel contends with an ironic tone that there are
few wise old women in society if cultural representations are to be trusted [my
emphasis] (1988:15). Older but wiser these days on TV is limited to a 16-year-old
girl advising a 14-year-old on sanitary protection! (McDaniel, 1988:15). Thus I argue
that even those representations that do exist exacerbate the condition of social invisibility
described by participants in this study as well as feminist scholars.
The double passage is marked then by corporeal change as well as social change
in status, material circumstances, relationships, and a host of other psychosocial factors.
Pearlmans notion of late mid-life astonishment evokes the sudden awareness that the
change has now become the dynamic condition of life and for women in particular,
change is accompanied by disruptions to self-esteem and identity (1993:1). These
disruptions surface in the literature through metaphors of contradiction and paradox
between lived experience and cultural representations. It seems that men sink slowly into
old age while women are hurtled there rather early on by the corporeal conditions that
mark their lives. Men mature while women become frail, dependent, manipulative,

32

feeble-minded, prone to disease and over the hill (Cohen, 1984:26; Onyx et al,
1999:18). Cool and McCabe (1987:58) frame this disparity as the paradox of age,
while other terms of reference include the double standard, double jeopardy, double
whammy, double consciousness, my own double passage and so on (Sontag, 1972;
Cohen, 1984:26,39; McDaniel, 1988:15; Condor in Ussher, 1989:11; Itzin, 1990:119;
Arber and Ginn, 1991:41; Abu-Laban and McDaniel, 1997:80-82;).
In a Harpers Magazine article, Joie de Vivre,13 De Beauvoir characterizes the
feminine disadvantage as follows: a woman, then, continues in her state as erotic object
right up to the end. Chastity is not imposed upon her by a physiological destiny but by
her position as a relative being (1972b:39). Here, de Beauvoir is referring to the process
of social construction that invests objects or things with meaning. In the case of women,
the menopause does not affect their capacity for sexual desire or their desire for full
participation in social life. However, women are now constructed and inducted into a
cycle of self-fulfilling prophecies that constructs them as socially and intellectually
incompetent on the basis of groundless stereotypes (OBeirne in Onyx et al. 1999:9;
Martin, 1992:175). In contradiction to the institutional discourse and practices of
medicine that construct menopause as a pathological condition with severe, debilitating
effects, women report a release of new energy and potentiality at the menopause that
enables them to take new steps toward independence, strength, and power (Martin,
1992:176-177). Indeed, McDaniel contends that the menopause frees older women from
their ascribed roles as sexualized objects enabling them to engage in political activism or

13

Given the subject matter of the article, I interpret the term joie de vivre to mean sexuality.

33

more personally rewarding activities (McDaniel, 1988:18-21). It is these activities of


women around and about the menopause that I conceptualize as conscious aging
activism.
In her landmark text, Look Me in the Eye: Old Women, Aging and Ageism,
Barbara Macdonald provides a compelling description of the cultural devaluation and
invisibility of old women. She was particularly irate that this social invisibility went
beyond patriarchy to include feminist and lesbian feminist networks.
take Plexus, for more than a dozen years the newspaper of the womens
movement in San Francisco and beyond advertised itself in the Womens Yellow
Pages: The award-winning national newspaper that has been reaching 18-54year-old women for eleven years. I regret the recent demise of Plexus, but I
have to recognize that it is a newspaper that took pride in announcing it was not
for me or for you. (Macdonald with Rich, 1991 [1983] 148-49)

Macdonald rails against the feminist newspaper that not only excludes her age group
from its target audience but also takes pride in declaring it to be so [my emphasis]. Old
feminist that she is, she expresses her frustration and her indignation not only with her
own social invisibility, but more especially for the cultural blindness practiced by a
political group which ostensibly should know better. While Macdonald might explain
her erasure from cultural representation as an effect of a patriarchal society, such
explanations do not stand up so well in explaining the practices of her own power base.
One particular website provides insights on the ethos of Crone symbolism and
culture. Web author and feminist artist Helen Redman frames her work in terms of
bringing her Wise Woman Crone to life, birthing it, so to speak, through [her] art
(Birthing the Crone website). As Redman tells it, the birthing project was precipitated at
the menopause, an embodied experience that shook mind, body and spirit with the

34

website designed to confront cultural phobias about growing older (Birthing the Crone
website). Her project begins at home within our own bodies, but her objectives
extend beyond the personal (Ibid.). Redman characterizes the project as a womans
issue [and] a dialogue with others that celebrates womens aging while resisting the
interweave of ageism and sexism that affects our healthcare, self-esteem, work and
relationships (Ibid.).
I find it productive to link Macdonalds complaint to Redmans Crone project.
BirthingtheCrone.com is Redmans response to the fundamental dilemma for aging
women in modern industrial societies. Firstly, they live a great deal longer than prior
generations of women with a life expectancy that extends anywhere from 20 to 30 years
beyond the menopause (McDaniel, 1986:64). Secondly, the physical signs and symptoms
of aging that women experience around and about the menopause are deemed
pathological by a patriarchal bio-medical hegemony (Fausto-Sterling, 1999:169-178;
Gannon and Stevens, 1998:2,7,9,12-13; Mansfield and Voda, 1993:89,100-101). Thirdly,
since women are no longer fertile at the menopause, their social status is profoundly
diminished to the extent that they are virtually absent from cultural representations
(McDonald with Rich, 1991[1983]; Walker, 1985:31; Itzin, 1986; Arber and Ginn,
1991:2,36). When women in later life are portrayed in cultural representations, they tend
to be stereotyped as obsolescent, in mental and physical decline, as sweet little grannies
or their opposite, domineering harridans (Arber and Ginn, 1991:46; Cool and McCabe,
1987; Ingrisch in Arber and Ginn, 1995:42; Itzin, 1986). Small wonder then, that the
experience of menopause shakes the mind, spirit and body of women!

35

How aging women respond to and resist diminished socioeconomic status at the
menopause is a question that has yet to be explored in its fullest dimensions. Likewise,
the role of feminist praxis in the changing social context of womens lives as they age has
yet to be fully considered. Macdonald wrote her landmark treatise on women, aging and
ageism in 1983, with a second edition in 1991. According to her very little had changed
in the eight years that separated the two editions. The question turns to how feminists
have responded to her challenges and in particular, given the aging demographics of
second wave feminist women, how might these women work through their own process
of aging? It is arguable that making the personal political as a value of Crone culture
links Crone networks to second wave radical feminist movements that took as their motto
the personal is political. Indeed, Rountrees research suggests that women are
reclaiming the Crone as a consequence of the womens spirituality movement emerging
from second wave feminism (1997:213). However, Crone networking may well have
evolved the motto for a somewhat different project, exemplified in the Crone of Puget
Sound statement of purpose:
Crone is an organization that encourages and supports the personal unfolding and
passage of its members from past outgrown roles and stereotypes into powerful,
passionate and satisfying old womanhood [my emphasis] (Crone Connection,
2002:2).

Given this Crone manifesto, the constructs of power, passion and the politics of the
personal become salient to the morphing of Crones. Therefore, I integrate feminist
scholarship relative to these concepts to develop my analysis of womens embodied
experience of transformation, personal and political at the menopause as they surface in
Crone consciousness, culture and communities.

36

TOWARDS A SOCIOLOGY OF THE BODY,


POWER, AND AGING
The departure for this dissertation lies at the nexus of a sociology of the body, power and
aging. Until quite recently, the body has been conspicuously absent from classical social
theory, such that Turner contends there has been a theoretical prudery with respect to
human corporeality which constitutes an analytical gap at the core of sociological
enquiry (Turner, 1996:60). Two points of interest emerge from Turners statement, the
question of an analytical gap and the question of theoretical prudery. Turner locates
the analytical gap in the emergence of modern sociology as a discipline which took the
social meaning of human interaction as its principal object, claiming that the meaning of
social actions can never be reduced to biology or physiology (Ibid.:61). His position on
aging, which likewise receives short shrift from sociology, goes to the same logic. Aging
as a biological or physiological process has been consigned to the body where it has been
deemed a pathological condition. Turner tends to redress this dislocation of the body
from sociology by making a dual account of the body distinguishing between the
subjective experience of embodiment and the objective physicality of the body
(Ibid.:32-33).
In contrast, feminist philosopher, Elizabeth Grosz, locates the roots of sociologys
conceptual blind spot much earlier on in Western philosophys splitting of the human
subject in the binary opposition of mind and body, reason and passion, psychology
and biology (1994:3). The tendency to dichotomy is not in and of itself the source of the
negation of the body. Rather, it is the hierarchical configuring of mind over body that

37

locates the corporeal body as the suppressed, subordinated, negative counterpart of the
mind (Grosz, 1994:3). The tendency to privilege mind over body was deeply etched in
European culture by the enlightenment scientific and philosophical knowledge projects
informed to a great extent by the philosophy of Rene Descartes. His famous dictum,
cogito ergo sum, provided the intellectual legitimation for mechanistic conceptions of the
body and the deeply etched divisions between rationality and the passions or emotions,
which are configured as unfortunate emanations from a necessary, but suspect human
contraption (Grosz, 1994; Phillips, 2000). The configuring of aspects of the social world
in hierarchical binary oppositions now resonates through multiple significant spheres:
mind/body; male/female; culture/nature; dominance/subordination and so on.
Grosz contends that the insidious implications of hierarchical binary
oppositions can be clarified by stringing them out in connective constituencies, the mind
with its binary siblings male, reason, dominance, and culture as privileged characteristics
relegate the absent body to the female sphere also long absent from classical social theory
(1994:3). In the configuration of body with its connective constituencies of female,
nature, passion, and object, we begin to understand the underlying constructions that
move Turner to characterize the exclusion of the body as a function of some version of
prudery; whether it is sexual or theoretical is a moot point. The exclusion of the body
arguably goes to its close relations with female sexuality and as Grosz emphasizes in her
analysis, cultural definitions of female sexuality and womens powers of reproduction
are filtered through a patriarchal lens that connects women more closely to the body than
men (Ibid.:13-14). As to the bodies of women, they have been opposed to the male body

38

and more closely linked to sexuality, death, illness, birth, and filth (Young, 1993:xix). At
the same time, the female body has undergone a transmutation from the grotesque to the
ethereal, from the demonic to the romantic, the low to the high (Ibid.:xix). Her
analysis suggests that the body is always layered over with social meanings that are
dynamic and open to transformation.
The construction of women as mentally defective leads directly to their
subjugation and as Smith argues, their exclusion from the relations of ruling and the
ideological production of culture (Smith, 1987). Given these circumstances, it is not
surprising then, that the body has been central to the analyses of feminist scholars.
Feminists of the second wave, Millet, Firestone, Dworkin, Griffin, Rubin, MacKinnon
and others, have theorized the female body as a site of struggle and women as victims
or survivors of patriarchal power and masculine hegemonies. Such analyses configure
power as structural relations of dominance and subordination in the mold of exchange,
rational choice or agonistic theories of power proposed by classical and contemporary
social theorists, Marx, Weber, Parsons, Homans, Blau and Foucault among others
(Hartsock in Hirschmann and Di Stefano, 1996; Hartsock,1983).
Hartsock argues that agonistic theories of power based on class analyses and
market models do not adequately explain womens relational practices (Hartsock in
Hirschmann and Di Stefano, 1996; Hartsock, 1983; Smith 1987). Such theories are
grounded in the same stereotypical dualistic assumptions and hierarchical binary
oppositions that, in general, are inadequate for theorizing a variegated social world
populated by a diversity of embodied human subjects. Further, they tend to extrapolate

39

social relations out of the ground of everyday lived experience as if the mundane details
in which these relations take place are of no consequence (Smith, 1987). Such
abstractions efface the experience of particular bodies, socially and culturally defined
bodies, marked and signified as sexed and gendered, raced, and aged, able and otherwise
(Grosz, 1994). Rather they generalize a theory informed by their authors lived
experience to all embodied subjects, an androcentric account framed as universal truth
(Rowbotham, 1973:11; Smith, 1987:19-22; 1990:31; Spender, 1985:1).
The notion of power as relations of dominance and subordination has been
effectively embedded in culture and naturalized through the signification of bodies within
biologically determined categories (Yanigasko and Delaney, 1995:1). Sex, gender, race,
sexual orientation, caste and ability by virtue of their biological essence are deemed
inevitable and immutable and offer an explanation for the enduring oppression of certain
groups of people and the privileging of others. Here, biology can be construed as a sort
of originary narrative that takes on a sacred significance providing legitimacy for
hierarchies of power that are the material outcome of relations of power figured as
dominance and subordination (Yanigasko and Delaney, 1995:1-2). By the early 80s,
many feminists were beginning to understand that conceptualizing power as relations of
dominance and subordination did not adequately explain the range and diversity of
womens lived experience or the ways in which women might be empowered as social
actors in their own right (Cohen, 1982:230; Hartsock, 1983:3; Charles, 1996:13).
Moreover, feminists were beginning to recognize the alienation produced by a feminist

40

politic with which many women did not identify (Cohen, 1982; Sommers, 1994; Douglas,
1994; Lehrman, 1997).
From a political perspective, the failure to develop alternative configurations of
power earlier in the second wave has proved disastrous for feminist movement. Many
women did not espouse feminism because of the perception that feminist rhetoric
discounted their own sense of power; others found their experience and needs were
marginalized by feminist discourse and feminist political agendas. Moreover, those
committed to feminist movement are continually confronted with an energy-draining
divisiveness, a politics of identity and difference that reproduces the politics of
dominance and subordination (Patai and Koertge, 1994; Lehrman, 1997:160-61; Douglas,
1994:17-20). Consequently, we find that just as feminists are producing highly creative
analyses of power, many women, young and old, eschew any ties to feminism; have little
or no sense of feminist consciousness or feminist history and little awareness of the
structural constraints imposed by the intersections of gender, race, class, ability, age and
other signifying social categories. Instead they have bought into the notion of grrl power,
a particularly contentious and ambiguous term, debated amongst feminist scholars.14
My intention here is not to disparage the praxis of second-wave feminists; I
consider myself an active participant in those efforts. Nor do I wish to diminish the

14

Since a full discussion of the term exceeds the scope of this paper, I provide only my own analytical
definition, derived from interactions with my students of mass media and popular culture. These women
project a peculiar ignorance of feminism, in general and second-wave feminist political movement, in
particular. All the more ironic, since it was second-wave politics opened the doors of academe to them. In
my experience, their attitude is partially a function of backlash along with the promulgation of a general
belief that women have now attained equality. The discourse of grrl power is an ideological construct
that appeases t hese young women and obscures the global structural constraints to the agency, subjectivity,
material and corporeal security of women (Gamble, 2000, 45-54).

41

effects of the backlash against women in general and feminist movement in particular
produced by a pervasive, hierarchical, hegemonic social system (Cohen, 1982:230;
Faludi, 1992). As Gatens points out, the new feminist theories of power owe much to
early second-wave feminist scholarship: if previous feminists had not attempted to
use dominant theories to explicate womens socio-political status, the difficulties inherent
in that project would not have come to light (Gatens, 1996:62-3). Rather, my interest is
to contribute to the feminist project of conceptualizing a version of power that is a better
fit for understanding how structural relations of power are contextualized within
particular communities of interest through the agency and intention of social actors.
In order to add to the growing body of feminist scholarship conceptualizing power
and to identify opportunities for feminist praxis, I explore alternative configurations of
power that structure Crone communities. I contend that in the process of generating a
Crone identity, the women I have studied are also writing new cultural narratives of the
female body, aging and power. While they may be subject to the constraints of an
oppressive social context, they also report empowering moments grounded in a sense
of self-definition, competence, creativity and collective energy (Rutman, 1996:90). Their
narratives suggest that power can also be configured as relations of interdependence and
empowerment that might provide a more sustaining and representative model for
theorizing relationships of power and the organization of social space (Hartsock in
Hirschmann and Di Stefano, 1996:31-37). It is these alternative versions of power that
underpin this project and particularly, the ways in which the sharing of the embodied
experience of aging in Crone communities opens social space and cultural dynamics for

42

the empowerment of women in their communities of place both individually and as an


identifiable cultural group. Ultimately, I argue that Crone counterstories when told in
Crone communities characterized by an ethics of care overwrite dominant narratives
about old women in communities of place and in the process the women are empowered
to live exceptional or authentic lives. By that I mean that Crones are empowered to life
experiences defined by self as opposed to the social expectations for old women put forth
in dominant culture. In that way, Crones are engendering a subversive force for
reconfiguring structural relations of power not only for the social landscape of old
women but also for social group relations in general.
In her argument for a sociology from the standpoint of women, Smith charges
the feminist sociologist to make an account and analysis of society and social relations
that are not only about women but that make it possible for us to look at any or all aspects
of a society from where we are actually located, embodied, in the local historicity and
particularities of our lived worlds (1987:5; 1990:28). Smiths charge is a call to bring
the body however it is constituted and defined, in to sociology; moving beyond the
sexed/gendered essentialism of binary oppositions or ideological constructions from
within the relations of ruling to readings of the body as it unfolds through lived
experience and social context. Likewise, Grosz also calls for an understanding of
corporeality that goes beyond biological determinism to the historical and cultural
specificities of particular historically located bodies (1994:19). Her reading of the body
positions it as a point of mediation between what is perceived as purely internal and
accessible only to the subject and what is external and publicly observable, a point from

43

which to rethink the opposition between the inside and the outside, the private and the
public, the self and the other, and all the binary pairs associated with the mind/body
opposition (Grosz, 1994:20-21).
My investigations of Crone culture, consciousness and collectivity suggest that
womens shared experience of embodiment around and about the menopause can provide
a case-in-point for such a reading of the female body. For women who identify
themselves as Crones, a term infused with extremely negative connotations of the aging
female body, the body is the departure for a process of revaluing and revisioning their
lived experience, a sort of phenomenology of Croning15 . Such a process resists purely
biologistic or essentialist accounts, or purely constructionist accounts imposed and
reified by a dominant culture (Grosz, 1994:22). In this way, my study conceptualizes the
body as a dynamic cultural artifact, open to strategic cultural intervention,
transformation, or even production through a dialectical relationship of individual and
structural agencies (Grosz, 1994:23). So a critical ethnography of Crones can meet both
Smiths appeal for historically located, embodied analyses of womens experience and
Groszs criteria for a corporeal feminism.

15

Here, I define phenomenology as a philosophical and sociological approach to human experience, which
examines phenomena relying on the immediate perceptions of the social actor as the ground for making
sense of experience with little regard for the epistemological preconceptions of positivism or
constructivism (The Encyclopedia of Sociology, Duskin Publishing, 1974, 210; The American Heritage
Dictionary, 3rd Edition, Version 3.5, 1994).

44

2. THEORY
Conceptualizing Crone Morphing

45

Invisibility
Sassafras, webcrones posting

Welcome home old body


not damaged goods
as some may think
Welcome home body
no hips or lips
or other bits
open to male comment

I have joined the invisibles


old women with fleeting smiles
we save for each other

pleased not to be
on show

1994

46

MAKING SENSE OF CRONE MORPHS


In this chapter, I set out the conceptual framework I have devised to explain the identity
transformation and political activities of Crones that I have characterized as morphing the
Crone. My intention is to elucidate how women themselves make sense of the processes
of conscious aging and conscious aging activism that they undertake in morphing the
Crone and to locate that understanding in a broader sociological framework. I begin by
conceptualizing social invisibility as an analytical concept, which I apply to the lived
experience of girls and women across the lifespan. Then, I elaborate the post-modern
concept of subjectivity and the concept of strategic identity from symbolic interaction as
the basis for theorizing Crone morphing as identity transformation encompassing social
psychological, corporeal and cognitive dimensions. Cognitively women morph the Crone
from a feminist politic, psychologically women morph the Crone in a process of locating
and defining the sacred self, corporeally women morph the Crone as the physiological
consequences of aging. As a basis for understanding the processes of conscious aging,
and conscious aging activism, which are central to the morphing of crones, I draw on
feminist theories of power, community, and care.
Ultimately, I argue that the conscious aging of women in Crone communities
structured by relations of interdependence and an ethics of care results in a social and
symbolic transformation of identity from abject old woman to powerful Crone. Women,
who represent the Crone as a cultural icon, a strategic identity and an ideal type in their
communities of place, now propagate alternative configurations of power through their
conscious aging activism and by extension, alternative forms of social organization.

47

Whether these alternative forms of social organization proliferate or not, they still
position the powerful Crone to queer the heterosexual binary and hierarchical structures
of western industrial capitalist patriarchy.

CONCEPTUALIZING SOCIAL INVISIBILITY


In relation to female invisibility, Jewish feminist author and activist, Letty Cotton
Pogrebin provides a succinct description. Invisibility results when a word is used to
describe a class of people in which you count yourself American, for example but you
discover that the person using that word doesnt mean you (Pogrebin, 1992:xiii). In her
essay, Invisibility is an Unnatural Disaster: Reflections of an Asian American Woman,
Mitsuye Yamada describes the experience of coming to awareness of her marginal status
as a teacher in a liberal arts college, where cultural stereotypes of Asian women
effectively erase her identity and interests (in Anzualda and Moraga, 1983:35-40).
Unlike a natural disaster, social invisibility is the erasure of individual subjectivity by
design, through the use of universalized masculine language and the masculine hegemony
over cultural texts, which in general renders the lived experience of women socially and
culturally invisible (Modleski in Strinati, 1995:190; Smith, 1987:17-19, 22-25; Spender,
1985:1-6).

Social Invisibility as Symbolic Annihilation


In the mass-mediated image-based culture of Western industrial capitalist patriarchy in
which the participants of my study are situated, status is conveyed through media
representation and the absence of representations of older women qualifies as a sort of

48

symbolic annihilation of older women as a cultural group with both symbolic and
material consequences. The concept of symbolic annihilation originated with George
Gerbner, communications and cultural scholar. In Gerbners cultivation theory, massmediated representations, particularly those on television produce "a common worldview,
common roles, and common values" (Severin & Tankard, 1997: 299; Shanahan and
Morgan, 1999:20-22). Gerbner argues that television is, for all practical purposes, the
common culture (in Tuchman et al., 1978:47).16 Mass-mediated image based representations act to signify or attach symbolic value to things, and in the process, also convey a
social existence to those things for a mass audience. It follows that things, which are
condemned, trivialized or absent in mass media are subject to symbolic annihilation
(Tuchman et al., 1978:7-8). In the case of Crones, I argue that it is old women who
experience symbolic annihilation through negative representations that minimize their
experience and their prevalence in the aged population.

Social Invisibility Turned Inside Out


Hill Collins provides an analysis of social invisibility relative to Black women, which is
particularly salient to my thesis. In her formulation, social invisibility is an effect of the
uniformly negative images of African-American women that subsume and efface the
fully human individual in the objectified category Black women (Hill Collins,
1991:94). But, paradoxically, being treated as an invisible Other gives Black women a
peculiar angle of vision, the outsider-within stance that has served so many African16

My own research gleaned from student assignments regarding media use confirms Gerbners research.
Students invariably report being bombarded by media products. On average, they spend an astounding 35
to 70 hours a week watching television and they do this in order to stay in the loop.

49

American women intellectuals as a source of tremendous strength (Hill Collins,


1991:94). In effect, social invisibility results in resistance and becomes the ground of
solidarity as Black women are forced to jump outside the negative controlling images
in order to produce a unique and authentic voice and define positive images of self
(Murray in Hill Collins, 1991:94-5). The idea of being forced to jump outside is not
unlike the situation of Crones who are forced outside at the menopause and choose to
listen to their own unique and authentic voice as opposed to conforming to socially
expected marginal roles (Ingrisch in Arbour and Ginn, 1995:43).

Social Invisibility as Erasure


Radical feminist, Marilyn Frye conceptualizes social invisibility as the erasure of lesbians
from the dominant reality in her essay, To Be and Be Seen: the Politics of Reality.
Frye contends that lesbians have no existence in patriarchal culture because they are
never represented as being(s) in the world (1983:162). She differentiates between
lesbians and women in general, on the basis of their social situations relative to men. The
existence of a lesbian identity stands opposed to the dominant narratives of patriarchy;
therefore, lesbians are completely erased from the history of humanity, a history of the
acts and organization of men (Ibid.:162). Women in general experience a complex and
paradoxical engagement with the dominant reality through the seesaw of demand and
neglect, of being romanced and assaulted, of being courted and ignored (Ibid.:163).
Here Frye conceptualizes a notion of multiple socially constructed realities and situates
lesbian identity and history as polar opposite to the discourse of dominant reality.

50

Her formulation suggests an explanation for the slow devaluation and erasure of
old women, since they, too, no longer fit within the paradoxical and fractured frames that
dominant reality constructs for women. Further, Fryes arguments open a space for a
new ontology of aging women, for new ways of being in the world in a body that like all
bodies is continually aging. So just as lesbians must construct their own identities or risk
the self-destructive effects of a spoiled identity,17 so, too, must old women situated
outside and in opposition to the dominant patriarchal reality create new cultural narratives
and (re)construct new identities that can mesh with their definitions of self. This
argument locates the project of morphing the Crone in the experience of social
invisibility and the wake of second wave feminist counterculture movement.

THE LIVED EXPERIENCE OF


SOCIAL INVISIBILITY
In recognition of womens relative social invisibility across the lifespan, it seems
imperative to figure the corporeal and social psychological transitions of menopause in
relation to their experiences at the menarche, which for women of my generation and
earlier, went unmentioned and unmarked. Even as I make that claim, the lines from a pop
song dance round and round in my head:
Girl, you'll be a woman soon. Please, come take my hand.
Girl, you'll be a woman soon. Soon, you'll need a man.

17

The notion of a spoiled identity was conceptualized by Erving Goffman as an aspect of the presentation
of self in the social world (1973[1959]). A stigma or defect in physical, psychological or group
presentation results in an enduring spoiled identity and requires that the individual develop strategies for
managing their identity (Goffman, 1974[1963]).

51

Although there are no mainstream ritual observances in American culture to herald the
menarche, the social meanings that adhere to the corporeal process are ritualized in
cultural representations, and naturalized through cultural narratives and practices (Diorio
and Munro, 2000:349-351; Shanahan and Morgan, 1999:21). The menarche was and
remains synchronous with the objectification of the girls body and its appropriation for
reproduction (Blumberg, 1997:25,113; Pipher, 1995:19, 21; Diorio and Munro,
2000:349-351). The menarche is socially constructed through its reproductive function,
which now defines the girls sexuality. In effect, female gender is constructed through
the embodied experience of the menarche situating girls within a heteronormative social
order that subordinates their interests to those of the men on whom they are dependent
(Skeggs in Diorio and Munro, 2000:351). Personal aspirations aside, girls internalize the
socially expected roles of girlfriend, helpmate, cheerleader, domestic, wife and mother
(de Beauvoir in Diorio and Munro, 2000:349-350).
Diorio and Munro have demonstrated that the ideological meanings invested in
womens embodiment through culture are accessible to and read off by young girls both
prior to the menarche and throughout adolescence (2000:350). In practical terms, then,
the menarche becomes an unconsciously felt, out-of-body experience that alienates or
robs the girl of her subjective self. Psychologist Dr. Mary Pipher describes the condition
of girls at the menarche relative to their sense of self:
Something dramatic happens to girls in early adolescence. Just as planes and
ships disappear mysteriously into the Bermuda Triangle, so do the selves of girls
go down in droves. They crash and burn in a social and developmental Bermuda
Triangle (1995:19).

52

She goes on to entertain Simone de Beauvoirs analysis of the issue. Girls who were the
subjects of their own lives become the objects of others lives. Young girls slowly bury
their childhood, put away their independent and imperious selves and submissively enter
adult existence Girls stop being and start seeming (de Beavoir in Pipher, 1995:21-22).
Here, De Beauvoir provides a poignant, yet definitive interpretation of social invisibility,
a condition whereby individual subjectivity is subsumed in social roles defined by
patriarchal culture. Its an analysis that suggests a partial account for the loss of esteem
experienced by girls at puberty and provides some directions for thinking about the
relative empowerment of individual women at the menopause and old women as a social
group that might be derived from naming and reclaiming themselves as Crones.

MORPHING THE CRONE: FROM ABJECT OLD


WOMAN TO POWERFUL CRONE
Given my claim that women in later life are transforming identity as a response to
corporeal change and social invisibility across the lifespan, recent debates on identity
become salient to my argument, as do the connections between culture and identity. In
this section, I want to open a space for theorizing the morphing of Crones as personal and
collective transformation. I begin with a discussion of the post-structural/post-modern
concept of subjectivity. The notion of subjectivities reflects a politics of identity that
taken together with the symbolic interaction formulation of strategic identity provides a
unified interpretation of the social psychological and political processes incorporated in
the morphing of Crones from abject old woman to powerful Crone. The challenge of
conceptualizing identity goes to the destabilization of culture as an analytic category and

53

the deconstruction of the very notion of identity, what might be framed as identity
politics emerging from post-structural, post-colonial and post-modern critiques.
Nevertheless, it is through this very process that a space is opened for considering how
identities might be transformed through a critically conscious corporeal feminism18
responding to social invisibility, the negation of identity from western industrial capitalist
patriarchal culture.

Post-modern Subjectivities
I begin with the classical definition of identity that has emerged in modernity: a singular,
unified, and enduring essential aspect at the core of individual being (Hall in Hall and
DuGay, 1996:2; Mathews, 2000:16). If the post-modern perspective conceives of identity
at all, it is opposed to the modernist version and loosely conceived as a fluid aspect of
human existence that is discursively19 produced through an ongoing process of
significations, constructions and reconstructions in texts, practices and representations
(Fullmer et al., 1999:134; Hall in Hall and DuGay, 1996:1-17).20 The if in this
statement conceptualizes the difficulty of theorizing the social or the individual in
postmodern terms since, in general, the grand narratives and the personal narrative,

18

A corporeal feminism is one that politicizes the symbolic and social constructions of the female body
inscribed by a masculine hegemony (Grosz, 1994, 23).
19
Here the term discursive refers to the Foucauldian notion of discourse as sets of deep principles
incorporating specific grids of meaning which underpin, generate and establish relations between all that
can be seen, thought and said (Foucault, 1974 in Shilling, 1993: 75). This notion of discourse is central to
Foucaults understanding of the body as the link between everyday practices and the operations of large
scale biopower. and the large scale organization of power on the other hand (Shilling, 1993:75).
20
This formulation is derived from the work of Peter Berger and Thomas Luckmann regarding the social
construction of reality and fits with the standpoint epistemology that informs this thesis when figured as
representations of a particular dominant hegemony. Fullmer et al. cite Berger and Luckmann in making
their argument that an array of potential selves populate the social world deriving their existence from the
symbolic cultural order (Fullmer et al., 1999:134).

54

objective reality and the essential have been deconstructed. So too, the concept of
identity has been deconstructed through the discursive reading of the term from cultural
criticism, feminist psychoanalysis, queer theory, as well as post-colonial, anti-racist, and
anti-essentialist movements that make a critique of the centre from the borderlands (Hall
in Hall and DuGay, 1996:2). Halls remedy is to consider the parameters of the selfconstruction project
using the resources of history, language and culture in the process of becoming
rather than being: not who we are or where we came from, so much as what
we might become, how we have been represented and how that bears on how we
might represent ourselves. Identities are therefore constituted within, not outside
representation They arise from the narrativization of the self, but the
necessarily fictional nature of this process in no way undermines its discursive,
material or political effectivity, even if the belongingness, the suturing into the
story through which identities arise, is partly, in the imaginary (as well as the
symbolic) and therefore, always, partly constructed in fantasy, or at least within a
fantasmatic field (Ibid.:4).

Thus a space is opened for morphing the Crone as a way and a why women in later life
might represent themselves. For most surely, modernity has tended to shuffle old women
backstage, hidden away with little room for play, let alone fantasy.
By exposing the post-Cartesian notion of a self-sustaining subject as an
ideological construct, post-modern critiques articulate the politics of identity that
universalizes the shared attributes of white European males to all others, therefore such
critiques are appealing to feminist critical culture theorists. Nevertheless, post-modern
identities are messy affairs, disembodied and tenuous. For example, Hall now conceives
of identities as identifications or points of temporary attachment to the subject positions
which discursive practices construct for us (Hall in Hall and DuGay, 1996:6). This is the
post-modern notion of subjectivity where identity is construed as a process of

55

subjectification or signification through which embodied subjects become attached,


interpellated or defined within particular discourses and discursive practices21 (Hall in
Hall and DuGay,1996:6). While the notion of subjectivity is useful for understanding
identity politics, the idea of temporary attachments seems to reduce identity to the
superficial elements of its commodified representations leaving out the deeper
implications of lived experience and the social psychological conditions through which
people negotiate and mediate the presentation of self in everyday life (Goffman,
1973[1959]). Therefore, I draw on the symbolic interactionist concept of a strategically
managed acting self for an understanding of the social psychological processes of identity
formation, integrating the affective, cognitive and corporeal dimensions as well as for an
analysis of the bodys centrality in the construction of meaning. Taken together, the
acting self of symbolic interaction and the post-modern subject provide conceptual
ground for the morphing of Crones as a strategic identity that integrates both political
interests and social psychological processes.

Strategic Identities
George Herbert Mead conceived of the self as a work in progress that is continuously
defined and redefined through social interaction (Charon, 1998:73). Here, the self is
better understood as an ongoing social process rather than a stable essence (Ibid.:72). In

21

Here, once again, the term discursive refers to the Foucauldian notion of discourse as sets of deep
principles incorporating specific grids of meaning which underpin, generate and establish relations
between all that can be seen, thought and said (Dreyfus and Rabinow, 1983; Foucault, 1974 in Shilling,
1993: 75). This notion of discourse is central to Foucaults understanding of the body as the link between
everyday practices and the operations of large scale biopower. and the large scale organization of power on
the other hand (Shilling, 1993: 75).

56

Meads formulation, the self is entirely socially produced by social actors in concert with
and through a conversation of gestures with others, which he sees arising
developmentally through the play, game and generalized other stages of childhood (Mead
in Rousseau, 2002:122). Ultimately, the human capacity to engage in self-reflection and
to take the role of the other is deemed basic to negotiating the interaction order (Mead in
Rousseau, 2002:122-125). Cooleys construct of the looking-glass self exemplifies
Meads ideas relative to identity as well as the ongoing process of identity construction.
The three elements deemed essential to the process are: the imagination of our
appearance to the other person; the imagination of his judgment of that appearance and
some sort of self-feeling, such as pride or mortification (Cooley in Strauss, 1956:296).
Cooleys notion of mortification resonates with the abjection and social invisibility
experienced by Crones that precipitates the process of morphing a Crone identity.
Likewise, Goffman argues that self-regulation is central to all societies and that the
emotional attachment to projected selves and face is the most fundamental mechanism
of social control leading us to regulate our conduct (Charon, 1998:197). Both Cooleys
looking-glass self and Goffmans dramaturgical framework incorporate a notion of the
self as a creative presentation through a continuous process of strategic self-management
mediated by social regulation. Goffman emphasizes the significance of interpersonal
rituals as expressions of respect and regard for what we value most highly the
individuals sacred self indicating the affective and social psychological dimensions
that infuse the interaction order and thus characterize the conscious aging processes in

57

Crone communities that results in the strategic identity of powerful Crone22 (Shilling,
1993:85; Charon, 1998:200).
Central to Goffmans notion of an acting self is an analysis of the body in relation
to human agency. Goffman holds that individuals have the capacity to regulate and
monitor their bodies in social interactions. In this, they rely on shared vocabularies of
bodily idiom, non-verbal conventions including dress, bearing, gestures and expressions,
the meanings of which are conventional or consensual and outside of their immediate
control (Shilling, 1993:82). Shared vocabularies of idiom are markers of classification
and through them, the body becomes the bearer of meanings imposed through discourse
and naturalized by culture (Ibid.:83). At the same time the body is also the maker of
meanings through self-directed and highly managed performances (Ibid.:84-85). For
women around and about the menopause, the signs of aging are difficult to manage and
resistance to the aging process itself often results in a grotesque presentation of self. On
the other hand, the powerful Crone seeks to transform the meanings of aging in women
such that wrinkles and grey hair become signs of wisdom as opposed to decay.
The acting self thus becomes the mediating factor between self-identity and social
identity (Ibid.:83). As such it incorporates a persuasive argument for the forms of agency
available to individuals at the micro level through the strategic presentation of a self in
encounters and face-to-face interactions (Goffman, 1973[1959]).23 The strategically

22

Goffman describes the interaction order as the underlying structure of forms that govern or shape faceto-face encounters at the micro level, but he dissociates the interaction order from phenomena operating at
the macro structural level (Goffman in Lemert and Branaman, 1997:233-261).
23
Historically, much of Goffmans work can be located at a point prior to the pervasive saturation of
electronically-mediated image-based communication and culture. He characterized the interaction order as
the autonomous domain in which individuals interact in close physical proximity while noting that the

58

managed identity or acting self of symbolic interaction can negotiate the agency-structure
divide to provide a more empowered subjectivity and a more insightful understanding of
the process of morphing the Crone. Identity can then be construed as the symbolic
meanings and dynamic interpretations we make and in Goffmans words, give and
give off in the presentation of self (Goffman, 1973[1959]:2-3). It is through taking up
particular social roles and aspirations, and in the performance that we bring forth these
symbolic identities and in effect, we represent ourselves (Ibid.:16). In the case of Crones,
the process of conscious aging in Crone communities provides a safe and sacred space
and an interdependent cultural group that empowers women to define themselves as
Crones and to engage in conscious aging activism in communities of place that reflect the
moral self-definitions and symbolic qualities now vested in a Crone identity.

COMING TO CRITICAL CONSCIOUSNESS


In this section, I want to consider the construct of critical consciousness as a mediating
factor between notions of identity as a dynamic social psychological process eventuating
in a personal, emotion laden self-consciousness and subjectivities as culturally derived
positions signified through a politicized process of representations, constructions and
reconstructions. For my thesis, the challenge is to integrate the politics of identity with
the social psychological processes that already take account of the relations of the body,
identity and meaning in cultural frameworks. Here I am suggesting that the powerful
Crone identity is constituted through the reconfiguration of the aging female body from
telephone or mails provide reduced versions of the primordial real thing (Goffman in Lamert and
Branaman, 1997:235).

59

biological obsolescence to phenomenal creativity on the ground of metamorphosis and


that this metamorphosis occurs through a transformed consciousness of self and situation.

Consciousness in Symbolic Interaction


Symbolic interactionist, Herbert Blumer fixed on consciousness as a key component in
understanding human action as a response to individual interpretations arising from social
interaction (Wallace and Wolf, 1991:254-5). Social psychologist William Gamson
conceptualizes consciousness as the mesh between cognition and culture between
individual beliefs about the social world and cultural belief systems and ideologies
(Gamson in Morris and Mueller, 1992:65). At the cognitive level, individuals are
actively processing meaning as they negotiate socio-cultural contexts (Ibid.:65). While at
the cultural level, meaning is always already organized into interpretive frames, so that
[a]ny change in consciousness involves an uphill symbolic struggle in order to
negotiate ideological and discursive spaces and cut the umbilical cord of magic and
myth which binds [the oppressed] to the world of oppression (Freire in Gamson,
1992:65).

Consciousness-Raising As A Feminist Politic


Catherine MacKinnon, radical feminist theorist and activist describes feminist method
[as] consciousness raising, which she defines as the collective critical reconstitution of
the meaning of womens social experience, as women live through it (1989:83). On that
ground, Hill Collins conceptualizes critical consciousness as a sphere of freedom that
generates a culture of Black women from within their own terms of reference (1991:103).

60

In her formulation, consciousness itself is a powerful tool for self-definition and


transformation of the interlocking systems of race, gender and class oppression (Hill
Collins, 1991:105). Critical consciousness leads us to contest controlling images and
replace them with self-defined representations and regardless of the actual content of
these definitions of self, the act of representing self validates and empowers individuals
within dominant reality (Hill Collins, 1991:107).

Taking a Crone Standpoint


The very notion of coming to Crone consciousness alludes to the potential for women in
later life to become critically conscious of the ideological or hegemonic representations
that structure dominant reality through their absence. That is to say, that the social
invisibility of women in later life cues them to the distortions that must be accomplished
in order to reflect that version of reality that is central to male dominance within a
hierarchical social structure. In that partial and perverse reality, only women who fit
the demands of heterosexuality, compliant, sexualized objects for men and potential
mothers for mens children, can be represented. In that way, the social invisibility of
menopausal women can be explained as a perverse misrepresentation that maintains a
masculine hegemony.
If women in later life come to Crone consciousness, they are well positioned to
queer the binary oppositions that maintain the status quo. To be sure, in a former life as
women, they were subject to masculine dominance and in actual terms, they still inhabit
the same physical universe. However, in abstract terms, they now stand outside of the
system, socially invisible in a sort of liminal space, that is, barely perceptible to the

61

mainstream (Merriam-Webster). Its a particular reality that while uncomfortable


confirms Hartsocks emphasis on the generativity of women in her arguments for a
feminist epistemology or womens standpoint (Benton and Craib, 2001:148). Although
Crones experience a sort of social death as abject old women in patriarchal-capitalist
formations, they birth themselves anew as powerful Crones, women of age, wisdom and
power. An aspect of the Crones power is their corporeal existence opposed to
heterosexuality although, of course, many of them remain sexually active and
heterosexual throughout their lives. Yet there is also evidence that some Crones come
out as lesbians at the menopause and that is a powerful statement of the ontological
reality of women in their interdependence with each other, an interdependence that has
been distorted as a structural effect of a patriarchal system that defines girls at the menarche for heterosexual relationships. Thus, it is through an engaged Crone standpoint, as
insiders outside, that Crone communities structured by relations of interdependence and
empowerment surface in the fissures and gaps of capitalist patriarchal culture as models
of alternative social relations that suggest the potential for a deeper level of reality.

The Negation of Identity


Fullmer et al. provide an analysis of the negating effects of social invisibility on the selfidentity of older lesbians (1999:131). Their approach integrates the concept of postmodern identities to explain the process by which the lesbian identity is erased from
dominant discourse. Since older lesbians are socially invisible, there is a corresponding
absence of subject positions on which to constitute a lesbian identity (Ibid.:134). This
argument applies by extension to women in later life although it is arguably experienced

62

differently depending on the intersecting social significations that constitute a particular


identity.24 On the basis of that argument, the social invisibility of older women and older
lesbians in both patriarchal and lesbian cultures, can be explained as the negation of
subjective possibilities by virtue of McDaniels double whammy of ageism and
(hetero)sexism (Fullmer et al, 1999; McDaniel, 1988:15).
Fullmer et al. also draw attention to the politics of sexuality, a debate that construes
lesbian sexuality as aberrant behaviour in conservative circles as opposed to a complex
identity in more liberal circles (Fulmer et al, 1999:134-5). This debate is significant in
conceptualizing the challenge to identity for women in later life, since they, too, are
negated through the dominant discourse of normative sexuality. The question turns to
how individuals who are operating under erasure or negation of identity might intervene
in the iterative process of constituting discursive identities. How might they (re)create
themselves and in the process overwrite the dominant discourse to accommodate their
definitions of self? Indeed, Gergen has conceptualized the post-modern condition as a
plurality of voices vying for the right to reality, that is the right to create and recreate
their own legitimate versions of self and being in the world (1991:7).

Crone Subjectivity
The study of women who are morphing the Crone is thus a study of political intervention
through the personal project of self-representation against the force of a negated identity

24

Patricia Hill Collins developed the concept of intersectionality to explain the effect of the various
signifying categories that constitute individual identity, for example, race, class, sex/gender, sexuality,
ability, age and so on. Elsewhere, Ive argued that identity is constituted through these intersections in the
mundane activities of everyday life (McCabe, 1999:5).

63

and the social invisibility in patriarchal capitalist cultural reality. By reclaiming the
powerful Crone as a subject position, a transformed identity, the participants in my study
are redefining and empowering themselves as an aspect of second wave feminist
counterculture movement. Given that women politicized in the wake of the second wave
feminist movement are getting older and given the rippling out effect of feminist
movement, Crone morphing can be understood as a socio-political process for
transforming the abject old woman of patriarchy into the powerful Crone, a woman of
age, wisdom and power.
The morphing of Crones must take account of third wave feminist critiques of the
second wave feminist agenda as a white, middle class womens political agenda that
subsumed all of partiarchys marginalized others within it. Given Crone Counsels
definition of the contemporary Crone cited in the Introduction, this becomes all the more
significant. One can argue that lip service to third wave and po-mo critiques can in no
way propagate a transformed social context. Certainly the participants in my study are,
for the most part, white, middle class, educated women. Therefore, the claim can be made
that they were always already powerful along certain axes of their life experience
although arguably their circumstances are considerably diminished through the aging
process. This claim directs us to the role of demographics in understanding the sorts of
transformations that are available to individuals that work in favour of their interests
while marginalizing the interests of their significant others, in this case, women of
colour, immigrant women and so on.

64

Identities must always be understood as manifestations of politicized social


relationships that are constituted on the ground of exclusion. So Crone, as a cultural
identity, is available and of interest to certain women who fit within the boundaries in
which such a choice emerges. This is evident in the social boundaries within the Crone
population. It is understood then that the Crone is constituted against the abject old
woman, but an abject old woman with a particular social history, race, class, education,
and so on. The boundaries within which a Crone identity becomes a choice excludes not
only the abject old woman of western philosophical traditions but also any traces of
racial, ethnic and class difference. Hall argues that the identity only becomes possible
through the exclusion of others (in Hall and DuGay, 1996:4-5).
The unities which identities proclaim are, in fact, constructed within the
play of power and exclusion, and are the result, not of a natural and
inevitable or primordial totality but of the naturalized, overdetermined
process of closure (Babha in Hall and DuGay, 1996:5).
That a politics of identity must be factored into analyses of the social psychological
dimensions of identity is apparent. However, a politics of identity in no way discounts the
construction of identity as a social psychological departure for self-definition, personal
empowerment and social transformation that reflects the respect we hold for our
individual sacred self and its place in the interaction order (Charon, 1998:200; Hill
Collins, 1991:106).

CONSCIOUS AGING AND


CONSCIOUS AGING ACTIVISM
The notion of aging consciously has a rather long life in aging studies from sociology,
social gerontology and social psychology albeit not necessarily in those exact terms.

65

Likewise, it has considerable purchase in popular culture relative to aging. For the
purposes of this thesis, conscious aging is a sensitizing concept that emerges directly
from the data. For example, the magazine Crone Chronicles conceptualizes its mandate
as a journal of conscious aging. The term refers to the idea of critical consciousness and
as such is a good fit concept for the interactions and experiences of Crones as opposed to
the sense of a generalized alertness or awareness of the condition of aging. The
formulation of conscious aging that follows is my interpretation of the way women who
identify with or as Crones make sense of their activities.
Conscious aging is the process through which these women engage in critical
reflection regarding the corporeal and social transitions of later life in order to demystify
the social, cultural and political consequences of aging. Conscious aging is a
collaborative project in which the collective energy of women is focused on making
sense of their experience and generating valued identities and social roles for women in
later life. One of the participants describes it as finding a way to pass on wisdom [to] a
world that wants to hear us Im wondering if there is some way that in our society we
can find a place as true Elders, somewhere our experience and judgment will be respected
and acknowledged (Ragin Gran in Smyer Yu, 2002:7). So, conscious aging becomes a
process of sharing the embodied experience of aging in Crone communities in order to
open social space and cultural dynamics for empowering women as Elders.
An aspect of conscious aging is manifesting the powerful Crone, the woman of
age, wisdom and power by bringing her to being symbolically and materially in their own
lives and projecting Crone identity from the margins over and against western capitalist

66

patriarchal culture. Therefore, many of these women engage in conscious aging activism
that allows them to negotiate spheres of activity and influence from which they may well
have been excluded in their previous roles as wives, mothers, or patriarchal helpmates.
While it is arguable that most of these women have already achieved some form of
respected status in the society, it is nevertheless true that their status is substantially
diminished as they age.25 Through conscious aging, they hope to acquire a renewed
social status, entitlement and authority. At the very least, many of them are able to
fashion new identities through their attachment to Crone culture and to be more positive
in their initiatives to define the direction of their lives. In this way, conscious aging
activism, unfolding within social, political, creative, intellectual and spiritual domains,
may be explained as the political reflections of the corporeal and socio-cultural
transitions of menopause. It is through these forms of activism that a Crone subjective
presence and Crone culture are produced in the social world.
There has been some scholarship on the sorts of social roles and identities available to women in later life embedded in dominant cultural narratives. For example,
anthropologists Cool and McCabe characterize the scheming hag and the dear old
thing as one of two stereotypical representations that is as much a cultural myth and
even a creation of the anthropologists expectations as it is a depiction of a social reality
25

The phenomenon of diminishing status is exemplified in the recent case brought by four women
professors at the University of Toronto for increased pension benefits for retired faculty and librarians.
The retirees alleged that the university had been unjustly enriched by paying them less than men
performing the same work (Chair for Women in Science and Engineering. Joint Statement from the
University of Toronto and Ursula Franklin, Phyllis Grosskurth, Blanche Lemko van Ginkel and Cicely
Watson, April 2002). Apparently, the women were doing well enough until retirement, when their
diminishing status caught up with them. The statement indicated that Granted that men also experience
diminished income, however, they are far better remunerated across the lifespan and therefore, more likely
to maintain their status. This case also underscores the need for a lifespan approach to aging, since social
invisibility in varying degrees effects women across the lifespan.

67

(1987 56). These caricatures reflect polar opposites on a power? weakness continuum
that Cool and McCabe characterize as the paradox for aging women (Ibid 56). Ingrisch
conducted 30 life history interviews to get at the implications of socially transmitted
images of womens roles and how these images were related to age and identity
(Ingrisch in Arber and Ginn, 1995:42). Ingrisch defined two categories of response to
societys expectations for women in later life. The first category was construed as
conforming and was opposed to the second category, living authentically (Ibid.: 43).
The motivation for conforming was characterized by participants as doing the right
thing. (Ibid.:43). The motivation for living authentically was characterized by
participants as attending to suppressed longings and personal aspirations (Ibid.:43).
Authenticity comes out of two capacities, resistance and self-definition (Hill Collins,
1991:93-95). Likewise, Fullmer et al. contend that our identities are to some extent
determined by the extent of choices, our own and those of others, that are available to us
(1999:134). By extension, if women are able to identify or create choices that serve their
own political interest through the conscious aging process, conscious aging becomes a
point of transition, a locus of resistance, self-definition and empowerment.
I contend that conscious aging through interaction and dialogue within Crone
networks, gatherings, wisdom circles, and collectivities inspires and facilitates some
women to make choices outside the norm of societal expectations. Crones are empowered
to take on conscious aging activism that is politically and personally self-interested, and
at the same time constitute a visible presence for older women in the mainstream of
society, renewed purpose and evidence of transformed identities. Accepting that

68

conscious aging and conscious aging activism have the potential to create socially and
personally meaningful roles for older women that meet Ingrischs criteria for living
authentically, consideration must be given to the dynamics and the dimensions by which
such remarkable transformations ensue. After all, women have occasion to get together
at Tupperware parties, horticultural meetings and religious events, but I would not claim
that these venues necessarily result in conscious aging, which is not to exclude them
entirely as sites for resistance and transformation.

THE DYNAMICS OF TRANSFORMATION:


POWER, COMMUNITY AND CARE
The literature and theories relative to the concepts of power, community and care are
extensive and a full discussion of these goes well beyond the scope of this thesis.
However, these constructs are of immediate concern to my thesis given my argument that
the morphing of Crones is only made possible through the conscious aging activities that
take place in Crone communities in which social relations are structured by
interdependence and empowerment informed by an ethics of care. I argue that this
particular configuration of power, community and care results in the empowerment of
women who now project a transformed identity through conscious aging activism in their
communities of place. Since this transformed identity is a powerful representation
constructed outside of dominant discourse, women who take on a Crone identity are thus
positioned to destabilize the status quo.
Traditional accounts of power from classical social theory define power as
structural relations of dominance and subordination, an account that was taken up by

69

many second wave feminists in their analyses of womens lived experience of


oppression. Nevertheless, even if we accept that classical account of power as
fundamental to a capitalist patriarchal social system, that circumstances does not by
definition preclude alternative relations of power within communities or subcultures
embedded in dominant culture or society. That so much of feminist theory relies on the
dominant account of power merely reflects the ideological construction of power as a
universal set of social relations, dominance and subordination, put forward as a biological
imperative, a transhistorical configuration prevailing through all cultures, communities
and social formations. Lordes words below identify the problem of appropriating the
tools of dominant culture as a template for analytical projects or lived experience:
The future of our earth may depend upon the ability of all women to
identify and develop new definitions of power and new patterns of relating across
difference. The old definitions have not served us, nor the earth that supports us
. For we have, built into all of us, old blueprints of expectation and response,
old structures of oppression, and these must be altered at the same time as we
alter the living conditions, which are a result of those structures. For the masters
tools will never dismantle the masters house the true focus of revolutionary
change is never merely the oppressive situations which we seek to escape but that
piece of the oppressor which is planted deep within each of us, and which knows
only the oppressors tactics, the oppressors relationships (Lorde, 1984:123).

The Erotic as Power


On power, Audre Lorde issues a challenge to feminists that we make a rigorous and
consistent evaluation of what kind of a future we wish to create, and a scrupulous
examination of the expressions of power we choose to incorporate into all our
relationships including our most private ones (1988:11). She, herself, contributes to
this exercise by freeing the concept of eros from its sexual bondage and reconfiguring it

70

as a more general concept for structuring social relations and empowering human
activity. Lordes configuration of the erotic is complex and not easily grasped for two
reasons. Firstly, it lies outside our normative experience and in her words, within a
deeply female and spiritual plane, firmly rooted in the power of our unexpressed or
unrecognized feeling (Lorde, 1984:53). It is difficult to take seriously, a concept of
power that draws on the feminine or the affective, when these have been construed as
signs of weakness and passivity by the masculine hegemony that dominates our cultural
narratives. Secondly, and following directly from this rationale, the female, spiritual
plane also lies beyond the pale of academic orthodoxy and the purview of the social
sciences. Nevertheless, if we are to be serious in our search for innovative insights on
power and praxis, we should not be deterred from breaking new ground by such
arguments.
Simply put, eros is the fusion of emotions, perceptions, psyche and cognition
brought to bear on all of our life experience and activities.
The erotic is a measure between the beginnings of our sense of self and the chaos
of our strongest feelings. It is an internal sense of satisfaction to which, once we
have experienced it, we know we can aspire the erotic is not a question only
of what we do; it is a question of how acutely and fully we can feel in the doing
When I speak of the erotic, then, I speak of it as an assertion of the life force
of women; of that creative energy empowered, the knowledge and use of which
we are now reclaiming in our language, our history, our dancing, our loving, our
work, our lives (Lorde, 1984:54-55).

Feminist philosopher, Jacqueline Zita conceptualizes the erotic as a capacity


arising from the very core of our being, in the materiality of our bodies (Kramarae and
Treichler:1985). As such, it is our capacity for perceiving, interpreting and acting in the
world from an affective, intuitive basis as well as a rational position. This is not to say

71

that the erotic is irrational, but only to open a much larger space in which the rational is
only one aspect of our power to negotiate the world as opposed to the entirety of that
negotiation. In her critique of Cartesian dualism, Lorde clarifies this distinction: [t]he
white father told us: I think, therefore I am. The Black mother within each of us the
poet whispers in our dreams: I feel, therefore I can be free (Lorde, 1984:38). Taking it
one step further, one might claim from a phenomenological perspective: I am, therefore
I think and feel. Acknowledging the power of the erotic entails acknowledging those
aspects of the life world, which can only be known or derived through the senses and the
emotions as well as the knowledge constructed through cognitive processes.
Hartsock, too, integrates Lordes concept of the erotic in her work on power. She,
too, maintains that theories of power are implicitly theories of community, therefore,
she argues that a study of power must examine the ways that such theories are implicated
in structuring, legitimating and reproducing particular forms or relations of power in
particular communities (Hartsock in Hirschmann and Di Stefano, 1996:27-28). Hartsock
argues that in the process of historicizing power as structural relations in particular
communities, we will identify alternative configurations of power and alternative
community formations that might inform a freer society comprised of autonomous selfdefining social actors (Ibid.:28). Moreover, alternative configurations of power must not
be reduced to forms of mere resistance to patriarchal power, but must be conceptualized
as transformative frameworks that exemplify practical action alternatives that can be
adopted through conscious consideration (Ibid.:39).

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Given the scholarship of feminists on power, community and care, my interest is


to analyze the relations of power found in Crone communities with the analytical tools
available from feminist scholarship to identify the processes and underlying structures
that produce this alternative social formation that is clearly more conducive to the benefit
of womens lives and particularly, old womens lives. Therefore, I elaborate two
configurations relative to power, communities and care, the counterstory and an ethics of
care that characterize the social interactions and structural relations of power in Crone
communities. These formulations diverge substantially from dominant discourse about
power, community and care and since they are exemplified through Crone conscious
aging and conscious aging activism, they provide useful analytical constructs for
understanding Crone consciousness, culture and communities.

Telling Counterstories as Feminist Praxis


Hilde Lindemann Nelson, feminist philosopher and bioethicist, develops a conceptual
framework that incorporates community structure, moral self-definition and the telling of
counterstories to define practices for transforming community. She uses a hypothetical
example, a group of nurses constituted as an interest group with shared goals and
challenges in the workplace to illustrate her framework. They are not unlike the women
who populate Crone communities who share interests and concerns with the communities
in which they reside. In Nelsons framework, structural relations of interdependence and
empowerment, and an ethics of care support the practice of collective and democratic
storytelling producing the counterstory, a story that overwrites the constructions of
dominant discourse.

73

Crone Communities
Nelson characterizes two types of communities: communities of place (found
communities) and communities of choice (chosen communities). In my analysis, I
conceptualize the Crone community as a community of choice constituted from a Crone
standpoint, whereas communities of place tend to be constituted from the dominant
cultures standpoint. Communities of place include families, neighborhoods, and nations
to which we belong as a function of geography, birth, or happenstance. Feminist wisdom
tells us that these sorts of communities are not always nurturing to all of their members
and to marginalized members or those excluded from membership, they can be
exploitative and oppressive (Nelson, 1995:23). Ostensibly, communities of place are
challenged by the dilemma of difference that inevitably infuses a large and diverse
social group (Ibid.:23). In communities of place, the dominant story often comes to be
the only story. This circumstance has the effect of marginalizing or homogenizing
difference, rendering it invisible to the detriment of the repressed and excluded Other
(Minow in Nelson, 1995:28-9).
Communities of choice, in contrast, are often constituted on the basis of shared
difference where members come from differing circumstances but share a common
purpose or vision. In coming together, members create a provisional space in order to do
the necessary work to bring their shared vision to fruition. At the same time, Nelson
concedes that all communities by their very nature must exert some degree of partiality
and exclusivity. However, the chosen community is better able to acknowledge
difference by virtue of the individual face that each member presents within a strongly

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defined moral space constituted by the narrative process of its members (Ibid.:30). In
this way, difference becomes personalized and self-evident, an enriching community
resource. The notion of difference surfaces in my study of Crone communities and results
in discussion and debate, forming connections across difference that provides the ground,
a sort of openness and acceptance for self-reflection, collaboration and consciousnessraising.
As my Tupperware example above suggests, conscious aging requires a particular
environment in which critical reflection and consciousness-raising are encouraged. In my
case, the seeds of a Crone identity were planted in a Womens Studies class, which was
arguably a feminist consciousness-raising group. Once the Crone took root in my psyche,
I looked for other similar sources to cultivate my Crone persona. For Crone conscious
aging to ensue, then, women must get together in communities of choice that are
structured around mutually beneficial, shared objectives as opposed to communities of
place in which we are increasingly marginalized. For this thesis, I refer to Crone
communities as a useful way of encompassing the notion of a community of choice as
Crone gatherings, wisdom circles, and collectivities including cyberspace networks in all
of their many variations, e-mail lists, chat rooms, bulletin boards and the like.

Moral Self-definition
Chosen communities are especially significant for their role in defining a moral space
where members can come together to discern, construct, correct, and celebrate the
communitys story (Walker in Nelson, 1995:24). The notion of moral self-definition
comes out of this process. Members define the community of choice and the definitions

75

of membership and they establish the precedents that will be morally binding within the
community of choice through a coherent and democratic process. They do this by telling
their own stories, making sense of past experience and future directions, and either
ratifying or repudiating their experiences in the moral space of their chosen community
(Walker in Nelson, 1995:27).26
This process enables morally developed persons to install and observe precedents for themselves which are both distinctive of them and binding upon them morally
(Walker in Nelson, 1995:27). Thus, they become self-defining across communities and
within communities and construct moral definitions to bring to their communities of
place. This is also an opportunity for these individuals, marginalized in their communities of place, to give voice to their experience and to be heard and valued in a morallyconstituted space structured by relations of interdependence and empowerment.

Counterstories
The community of choice opens a space for its members to explore their situation in the
wider community (Nelson, 1995:27). Nelson defines the counterstory as
a story that contributes to the moral self-definition of its teller by undermining a
dominant story, undoing it and retelling it in such a way as to invite new
interpretations and conclusions. Counterstories can be told anywhere but
particularly when told within chosen communities, they permit their tellers to
reenter as full citizens, the communities of place whose goods have been only
imperfectly available to its marginalized members (Nelson, 1995:23).

This is a narrative process because it orders a sequence of events for the purpose of
revealing or creating meaning (Nelson, 1995:27). Stories are counterstories when they

26

Nelsons process of moral self-definition resonates with MacKinnons description of the feminist
consciousness-raising group.

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reveal a meaning that goes against the grain of communities of place and when they are
told with the particular intention of undermining the dominant narratives of the found
community. Moreover, since cultural narratives have a dynamic dimension, it is always
possible to overwrite the dominant narratives in communities of place with the moral
narratives of communities of choice.
Nelson argues that counterstories have subversive possibilities when they evoke
powerful emotions, which motivate active resistance and appropriate insubordination
within the communities of place (Nelson, 1995:35). Appropriate insubordination resides
in the veracity of the counterstories and Nelson sets out a tentative guide for assessing the
moral worth of counterstories (Ibid.:36-8). Ultimately, for a counterstory to motivate
action, there must be a temporary stopping-point when community members agree to
take political action for change within the communities of place (Ibid.:37). I contend that
in Crone communities, individual women tell their stories, reflect on them critically and
come to consciousness about the hegemonic meanings embedded within them. When
taken together as cultural practice, the result is a community counterstory that represents
meaning for all members of the community. It is through this community counterstory
that the potential to transform dominant reality evolves, since it takes power over the sign
of the Crone for Crone-identified women and through their activities in their communities
of place redefines it for others in dominant reality.

Rethinking an Ethics of Care for Crone Communities


For the most part, I have found that my interactions with women as friends, colleagues,
co-workers and research participants have been characterized by a commitment to caring

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and nurturing relationships. I have argued that women take up caregiving not only as a
socially defined role but also as a cultural practice and an ethical position that is
empowering in its effects, a claim that is to critiques of gender essentialism, stereotyping,
reification of femininity, ethnocentrism, and romanticism (Deveaux, 1995:116). Again
there has been a great deal of scholarship relative to an ethics of care and its potential
as a source of resistance and change, a full exploration of which goes beyond the scope of
this thesis. Rather, my goal here is to conceptualize an ethics of care as both a moral
standpoint and a set of practices that structures Crone communities such that all
community members are empowered to participate in conscious aging and conscious
aging activism as a way of resisting dominant cultural narratives about post-menopausal
women.

Care as Moral Standpoint and Social Practice


Care can be defined as the process through which the species seeks to maintain itself and
its environment (Tronto, 1995:142). As such, care is basic to social relations through the
shaping of humans as embodied agents. An ethics of care then implies a set of values or
moral principles that apply to a set of life-sustaining practices. An ethics of care is
gender neutral, and not biologically determined (Deveaux, 1995:115-6). The defining
tenet of a perspective of care is that persons are relational and interdependent as
opposed to the individual, autonomous agents that are central to western industrial
capitalist patriarchal culture and/or to liberal democracies defined by individualism and
an ethics of rights and justice (Held, 1995: 132). Underlying the notion of an ethics of

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care is the belief that civilization depends on a culture of sharing and caring; a culture of
caring does not depend on civilization (Adelman, 1996:17).
In framing the human world within an ethics of care, Gilligan characterizes the
notion of individualism as a state of disconnections and dissociations. When figured
as foundational to conceptions of self and morality it is a careless and harmful
condition (1995:121). Gilligan answers the critiques of essentialism and romanticism by
differentiating between a feminist ethics of care and a feminine ethics of care
(1995:122). The former begins with connection theorized as primary and fundamental
and pervading all spheres of human life. The latter is an ethic of special obligations and
self-sacrifice acted out in the private, personal sphere perpetuating the separation of
the public world from the private world (Ibid.:122). This dualism poses a paradox for
women: women find themselves giving up relationships in order to have a relationship
(Ibid.:123). The resolution is found through adopting an ethics of care as the voice of
resistance that challenges the discourse of a public sphere of autonomous rights against
a private sphere of nurturing relationships (Ibid.:123).
Critics contend that an ethics of care perpetuates stereotypical ideologies of
women as nurturers and caregivers even as it universalizes and homogenizes womens
experiences (Mattessich and Hill in Baber and Allen, 1992:7). The effect is to reproduce
oppressive gender relations (Baber and Allen, 1992:7). However, an ethics of care is
gender neutral, and not biologically given (Deveaux: 1995:15-6). That caregiving has
been historically construed as womens work is insufficient grounds for precluding it as a
moral basis for human interactions. In fact, since care is basic to human survival and

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therefore, must be practiced, a failure to interrogate the gendered construction of care


will, almost of certainty, maintain the status quo.
Deveaux suggests that opponents of an ethics of care are missing the point. Their
en-gendered critiques reflect a failure to recognize the nature and scope of care as both
an ethic and a set of practices Deveaux, 1995:117).27 By overlooking the ethical
dimensions of caregiving practice, social and political inequalities endemic to the
polarization of care are reproduced (Ibid.:117). Moreover, there are strong arguments in
favour of defining caregiving beyond the social reproductive work of women. For
example, Adelman figures the Welfare State as the insitutionalization of care through
the common civic understanding of capital, government and labour (1996:8). As
such, it represents the integration of an ethics of care with an ethics of rights and justice.
The Canada Health Act is one exemplar of an ethics of care enshrined in law with the
universal condition
of care superceding the notion of the individuals ability to pay. Adelman describes the
ongoing dismantling of the Welfare State as a throw-back to primitivism just because
caregiving is radically devalued in the ensuing structural adjustments (Adelman, 1996:9).

An Ethics of Care as Power and Practice


If we accept that communities of necessity imply relationships, and relationships are
infused with power, attention must be given to the underlying relations of power that
structure social relations in Crone communities in order to make the case that these
communities exemplify a counter-culture formation relative to dominant culture. Here, I
27

My italics.

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contend that the relations of power that structure Crone communities are relations of
interdependence and empowerment. Such a formulation of power has been traditionally
conceived of as power with and power to as opposed to power over by feminists
theorizing power (Allen, 1999). The power to encompasses the qualities of capacity,
energy, confidence, competence and effectiveness that empower (give power to)
individuals for self-actualization (Merriam Webster Online; Charles, 1996; Hill Collins,
1991; Hartsock, 1983). Therefore, empowerment constitutes both the process and the
objective outcome of structural relations of power in Crone communities.
Interdependence is the social condition of mutual dependence implicit in a
relationship structured cooperatively around a common vision in which an ethics of care
mediates the process. An ethics of care implies mutual respect, trust, acceptance and
positive regard for all members of the community. Yet, it does not preclude the critical
reflection that enables the community to do the work of discernment, construction, and
correction that Nelson identifies as critical to validating the communitys story.
Empowerment is the individual condition of moral self-definition that comes out of a
sense of competence and confidence in telling your story, reflecting on it critically within
a caring community of choice, so it can be retold from a new perspective and validated
by the community of choice. Empowerment comes out of the interactions in Crone
communities and is arguably the hallmark of Crones. Crones choose to live authentic
lives that go against the grain of societal expectations as opposed to invisible lives
conforming to expectations defined by dominant discourse.

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Sensitizing concepts that surface in Crone communities to open space for living
an authentic life include coming out and speaking the truth. Coming out has
multiple meanings in Crone discourse including coming out in some newly defined
identity, coming out as a Crone, and sometimes coming out as a lesbian or bisexual.
Coming out is a process encompassing the telling of stories in which choices can be
expressed and analyzed and ultimately validated for the individual woman. Often women
have been unable to speak their truth or to speak at all. The focus in Crone communities
is on empowerment and self-definition in multiple spheres of human activity such that
Crones are enabled to speak, think, feel and act against the grain, the Crone equivalent of
Nelsons acts of insubordination.
The primary activity in Crone communities is consciousness-raising, although that
will not be the exclusive interest. Since women and Crones are by nature sociable, and
derive benefits from telling stories about their experiences, other issues and topics surface
in discussions. It is in the listening and hearing of these stories without judgment that
validation is expressed. Resistance is also a key dimension of conscious aging, whether it
arises within the chosen community or propels women to join Crone communities is
moot. Both individually and collectively, Crones are non-conformists who resist societal
expectations for women in later life. Further, they have arrived at a particular point in
life where they have a complex of life experience, knowledge, skills and abilities that
positions them to take a leadership role as elders in the society. Resistance comes out
of the devaluation of their potential through the reduction of womens roles to
reproduction narrowly defined as birthing babies.

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QUEERING THE HETEROSEXUAL BINARY


My first tentative investigation of the Crone was a participant observation at an Imaging
the Crone workshop conducted by feminist artist, Helen Redman in her San Diego studio.
The purpose and the activities of the workshop were focused on creating images of a
Crone body in mixed media in a collaborative circle of women building on the findings
on the studio walls from prior workshops. Some of the participants were self-consciously
feminist or Crone, while others came out of curiosity, through friendly networks or as a
birthday present. It seemed to me that through the collaborative process of creating an
embodied image of their Crone persona, participants were taking back the body
surrendered at menarche. In so doing, they were engaging in feminist praxis: conscious
aging and conscious aging activism. Although they might not have espoused a feminist
politic, they nevertheless came to some level of consciousness regarding the social
invisibility of old women. They also engaged in the telling of counterstories by creating
venerable images of old woman, rendering the Crone archetype corporeal, and investing
her images with symbolic meaning in the group reflections that ensued before and after
the creative sessions.
Within the workshop, it was apparent that the Crone collaborative circle was
positioned to queer the binary oppositions that constitute and legitimize masculine
hegemonies and patriarchal social structures (Walker, 1985:22; Arber and Ginn,
1991:48). Here, Im arguing that the powerful Crone archetype embodied in the psyches
and the images produced by post-menopausal women stands opposed to the heterosexual
norm, the norm of dominant male and passive female. Contrary to patriarchal

83

stereotypes, the Crone archetype is not passive nor is she barren and apparently, she has a
self-empowering agenda. Of course, this is true only if the Crone can be rendered visible
through cultural images and corporeal through the praxis of women in later life
(Rountree, 1997:226). In this regard, I draw on the notion of Crone conscious aging and
the way that personal empowerment develops out of interaction and dialogue within
Crone networks and inspires and facilitates the activities of Crones that I characterize as
conscious aging activism. The Imaging the Crone workshop series facilitated by Helen
Redman exemplifies this form of activism as does her website, BirthingtheCrone.com.
Other comparable activities include the street theatre productions of the Raging Grannies,
the spiritual activism of Croning rituals, the cultural artefacts of Crone poets and artists
and the intellectual creativity of Crone scholarship on aging, family, sexuality,
spirituality, gender, labour, politics, ecofeminism and a whole raft of other issues.
I conceptualize all of these activities as socio-cultural reflections of the corporeal
transitions of menopause that arguably produce a Crone subjective presence and Crone
counterculture. In consequence, I argue that contemporary Crones have a new story to
tell, collectively crafted by second wave feminists and women of their cohort inspired by
feminist consciousness-raising in Crone communities. It is a story that overwrites the
dominant cultural narratives that define and reduce women to the condition of
reproduction dispensing with old women who are finished as women at the menopause.
When told in Crone gatherings, wisdom circles and communities, it provides an
opportunity for women to redefine themselves as a powerful Crone, a woman of age,

84

wisdom and power. Such a story, when shared with others, has the potential to transform
the social landscape of women by bringing a new dimension of female subjectivity into
the world both in practice and in theory.

85

3. METHODS
Seeking the Crone

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Calling All Crones!


The Crone Project website

Welcome cyber-traveller to this infinitesimal virtual space near the centre of the web
where minds converge to ponder the Crone. But first let me spin out my own story for you. I am
a student Crone. That is, I am a Crone student and a student of Crones
I am exploring what I call Crone phenomena: crone networks, crone collectives, crone
lifeworlds, crone stories, crone values, crone social and political movements and Crones.
I am hoping to engage with a number of Crones to collaborate in my research.
Collaboration would involve subscribing to my listserve; engaging in the dialogue that goes on
there; filling out a survey that I will be eventually mounting on my website and perhaps,
providing a respectful interview about their Crone way of life, which is not the way, of course,
but a way.

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CRONE COLLABORATIONS
As marxist method is dialectical materialism, feminist method is consciousness
raising: the collective critical reconstitution of the meaning of womens social
experience, as women live through it.? ?

Calling all Crones to collaborate in an ethnographic study of Crone culture,


consciousness and communities has methodological implications as well as political
ones. Firstly, the project is conducted from a feminist framework with the explicit goals
of raising Crone consciousness and producing Crone knowledge as well as describing and
making sense of Crone culture. On that account, I have employed the strategy of
Participatory Action Research (PAR), working collaboratively with other women to
conceptualize the Crone. I have invited them to engage in research about Crone
consciousness, Crone networks, Crone collectives, Crone life worlds, Crone stories,
Crone values, Crone power and Crone social and political movements through a
dialogue about the Crone, who is characterized as a symbol of age, wisdom and power
(McCabe, 1998). In this way, my research project contributes to the social construction
of Crone consciousness, culture and communities. While this may seem problematic
within a positivist or scientific tradition, the feminist framework and stand-point
epistemology that underpins this project support the notion of ongoing active and critical
construction of meaning that will effectively result in a transformed social reality.
Secondly, the primary research strategy, participatory action research (PAR),
intends to engage participants in a consciousness raising process that will empower them

MacKinnon, Catherine A. (1989) Toward A Feminist Theory of the State. Cambridge, MA: Harvard
University Press.

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to actively shape their social context (Bee in Kirby and McKenna, 1989, 16). An
important goal and expectation of my study, then, is that women will develop Crone
consciousness through the telling, hearing, and critical analysis of their experiential
narratives in consciousness raising groups. The sharing of experience and analyses
should result in a more robust Crone collectivity dynamically engaged in the process of
evolving Crone culture and identity with individual women empowered through the
iterative cycle of consciousness raising, resistance, interdependence, and self-definition.
Having thus acknowledged the potential implications of my study for the
morphing of Crones, I turn to the methodological considerations and research methods
implemented in conducting this study. These include the feminist politic and
methodology that frame the project;28 the strategies of participatory action research and
ethnography that inform the design of the study; the data collection methods, analytical
frameworks, and the role of the researcher in the design, development, implementation
and writing up of the project. I will also discuss the issues of validity and the potential
for generalizing theory and analytical outcomes when working from a qualitative
paradigm as well as the ethical considerations and limitations of the study.

FEMINISM AS A POLITIC OF RESEARCH


In her comprehensive survey of feminist methods, Shulamit Reinharz identifies the
challenge in mediating between competing feminisms and perspectives and politics
among those who call themselves feminist. She deals with the practical problem of a
28

Stanley differentiates methodology as a framework for research as opposed to methods, which are the
techniques for conducting the investigation (1990, 13).

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working definition of feminist research by allowing the researcher to self-define


(Reinharz, 1992, 6). In that regard, she may be fulfilling a feminist destiny to derive
abstractions from practice as opposed to the reverse configuration. In consequence, I
define both my work and myself as feminist without recourse to the varying shades of
feminism that it might support or oppose and set out three fundamental criteria by which
I categorize this study as feminist.29
Firstly, my work seeks both to understand and to ameliorate the situation of
women in later life who are both the participants and collaborators in the study. In that
regard, it is informed by a politic of feminist praxis, the dynamic interplay between
theory and practice, where theory is explained as thoughtful reflection and practice as
political action (Maguire, 1987, 3, xv; MacKinnon, 1989, Kirby and McKenna, 1989, 34;
Stanley, 1990, 15). Secondly, my work is feminist because it focuses on women and
their lived experience and their own insights and interpretations of that experience. This
criterion goes to what might best be termed a sociology of women, a knowledge project
that demystifies experience, not only, for the researcher but also for the research
participants (Spender, 1985, 1-2; Smith, 1987, 8; 1990, 21-24; Stanley, 1990, 15, 21).
Thirdly, both the departure for this study and the primary research method can be
construed as feminist consciousness-raising. MacKinnon defines consciousness raising
[as] the process through which the contemporary radical feminist analysis of the situation
of women has been shaped and shared (1989:84). That analysis is best expressed

29

At the same time, I acknowledge the existence of multiple feminisms characterized by political, ethical
and epistemological differences that have implications for any knowledge claims that I might ultimately
propose as a result of my study (Stanley, 1990, 20).

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through the maxim, the personal is political, the theory that the private lives of women
are informed by a small p politics of dominance and subordination mystified and
naturalized through the cultural texts of a patriarchal social system (MacKinnon,
1989:84; Yanigasko and Delaney, 1995). It follows that the pursuit of consciousness
becomes a form of political practice (Ibid., 84; Rowbotham, 1973:27). The politicization of consciousness meshes critical analyses of the material conditions of womens
lives with practical action for change not only in the lives of the research participants but
also in the socio-cultural formation through which those conditions are produced and
legitimized. Thus, it is my contention that women who are morphing the Crone do so
with the expectation of transforming self and the social system that defines them.

RESEARCH STRATEGIES
Feminist Participatory Action Research
This study, which I have characterized to its participants as The Crone Project, is
ethnographic in its methods and perspectives, but it also fits within the second wave
feminist consciousness-raising project. Therefore, it not only examines the morphing of
Crone images, consciousness and identities, but by its very nature, which is participatory,
collaborative and dialogic, it also engages in producing those self-same Crone images
and identities. In so doing, it aspires to be a political project to raise the consciousness
of women as to the prospect of aging as a Crone and to figure the implications for their
lived experience at the intersections of ageism and sexism. In that regard, the project is
located within the tradition of participatory action research (PAR).

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PAR seeks to link three distinct yet interconnected social processes, social investigation,
education and action, so that oppressed people are positioned to create social knowledge
that is located in the actual concrete conditions of their lived experience (Maguire,
1987:3). Maguire characterizes PAR as a systematic approach to personal and social
transformation (Ibid.:3). Since Crones were already engaged in this sort of
transformative process, consideration must be given to the way that this study locates
itself within that process. For example, the various activities of this study, website,
cyberspace discussion list and focus groups, took place in Crone gatherings with the goal
of sparking discussions about the Crone symbol, culture and collectivities from a critical
perspective that might otherwise not have been raised directly. Therefore, the notion of
morphing the Crone has been conceptualized both in the consciousness of women and the
context of the academy. The writing of this thesis and by extension, the potential for
presentations and publications contributes to the construction of social knowledge
regarding the Crone and Crone culture. Finally, the activities and the networking that
ensued from this project can be conceived of as activities that contribute to both critical
education and political struggle.

Feminist Ethnography
Since this project also aims to describe and make sense of Crone culture, it is also
informed by the strategies of feminist ethnography. Neuman defines ethnography as an
approach to field research that emphasizes a very detailed description of a different
culture from the viewpoint of an insider in that culture in order to permit a greater
understanding of it (2000, 509). For example, Franke [1983, 61] locates culture as an

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object of description that resides within the thinking of natives (in Neuman, 2000:347,
509). So when I set off on my initial tentative cyberspace search for traces of Crone
culture, I was, in a curious fashion, searching for self. Crone consciousness and identity
were already aspects of my psyche and my body. Visweswaren (1994) contends that
feminist ethnography by definition meshes the activities of traditional ethnography with
autobiography in order to meet the requirements of self-reflexive feminist research. To
some degree, then, how the natives make sense of their culture is how I make sense of
it, not through the imposition of meaning so much as the shared construction of meaning.
My experience and social location thus constitute another layer of data for analysis
(Kirby and McKenna, 1989, 32).
As Franke suggests, ethnography has traditionally been a practice of studying the
culture of natives, the exotic other on some foreign shore or the alien other among us, as
was the case with the Chicago School studies of immigrant populations. In this study, I
purport to be studying the Crone, who I have claimed is native within me. The
overarching objective of my study, then, is to discover the source of my thinking myself a
Crone, and to elaborate the process by which a Crone cultural identity is fashioned and
reproduced in social interaction with other like-minded natives. This objective suggests
the possibility of cultural fragments embedded in a pluralistic society in which the notion
of a post-modern subject with multiple identities arises. However, in considering the
notion of pluralism, Visweswaran argues for careful analysis, since the concept of trying
on identities eclipses the relations of power through which identities are constituted, no
matter how strategically they are deployed by particular social actors or groups (1994:8).

93

By interrogating my self as a subject of my research, I also redress the power


imbalance of traditional ethnographic research that positions social actors as objects of
knowledge for expert researchers (Kirby and McKenna, 1989, 32). From a political
perspective, this approach has been an expectation of feminist research that is not so
readily accomplished in the field or reporting stages (Visweswaran. 1994:20-21;
Reinharz, 1992:69; Abu-Lughod, 1990). Therefore, Visweswaran locates the potential for
feminist ethnography in locating the self in the experience of oppression in order to
liberate it [emphasis mine] (1994:19). Thus the departure for the study is my own lived
experience of invisibility, ageism and sexism at the menopause. My actions in the field
are aimed at conceptualizing social invisibility and ameliorating its effects in the lived
experience of old women. My intentions are to open a space for women to reflect on
Crone culture, to come to Crone consciousness, fashion Crone identities and ultimately to
become empowered through the experience. This intention is addressed through
collaboration and discussion in consciousness-raising groups and through the framing of
broad research objectives that ostensibly are clarified within the collaborative process.
These broad objectives were framed as follows:
1. to learn about Crone consciousness, networks, collectives, life worlds, stories, values,
power and social and political movements;
2. to describe the lifeworlds and document the lived experience of Crone women in their
own voices;
3. to bring the history of Crone women in from the margins, so that their wisdom can be
acknowledged and integrated into the "legitimate" domain of academic knowledge.

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Cyberspace Ethnography
There is a rapidly proliferating literature regarding internet research and cyberspace
ethnography with a virtual cacophony of contentious issues relative to sampling, data
management and analysis, validity, ethics and limitations arising and vying for space in
the literature. In consequence of these challenges, my dissertation supervisor, Dr.
Barbara Hanson shared the role of list owner for the webcrones mailing list, which
allowed me as a graduate student to host the list on the York University web server.
Given the emergent nature of cyberspace ethnography and questions relative to validity
and authenticity, Dr. Hanson also subscribed to webcrones as a non-participant observer
throughout the duration of the study. This allowed her to provide the requisite
supervision relative to design, methodological and ethical issues. I address some of the
research contingencies arising from this emergent site of research in the relevant sections
below.

Conceptualizing the Virtual Community


Given that I have conceptualized [email protected] along with other cyberspace
entities as virtual communities, I want to set out the technical accommodations that allow
such communal social formations to flourish, the challenges to making that definition and
my rationale for doing so. Reciprocal communications are the hallmark of the cyberspace
community. Discussion is ongoing and substantial. There are a number of software
programs that facilitate reciprocal communication, for example, e-mail discussion and
distribution lists generated through member subscriptions. Discussion forums also known

95

as bulletin boards or newsgroups provide features for posting to a discussion through a


website via e-mail or on the host website. Members can also access the discussion in the
same ways and discussions can be archived on the website, providing a historical record
of the community for new members. Chat rooms simulate a meeting space, where
individuals can congregate and hold real time discussions. Chat rooms can be accessible
to all or only to select individuals and this sort of exclusivity is a vehicle for defining the
boundaries of a community.
The challenge of defining communities in cyberspace goes to the nature of space
itself. Contemporary scholarship relative to the internet tends to conceive of virtual and
actual space as a dichotomy (McCabe, 1999; Rheingold, 1994; Benedikt, 1993; Tomas,
1993). Like all such oppositions, the focus tends to devolve on difference and
uniqueness as opposed to similarities and commonality. For example, the virtual realm is
often figured as a disembodied utopian environment where netizens divest themselves
of the signifying discourses of gender, age, disability, ethnicity, and race that result in
forms of social exclusion and stratification (Ward, 1999:96). Further, there has been a
tendency to romanticize the virtual as a site of divine potentials where disembodied
humans can aspire to immortality (McCabe, 1999; Tomas, 1993).
Ward attributes these tendencies to a conceptual distortion: the failure to
recognize the intersections of virtual and actual social space, which she now conceives of
as a hybrid space that is neither wholly physical nor virtual (1999:95). From a
sociological perspective, the notion of hybrid space might be better thought of in terms of
social space in which the potential for social interaction straddles the intersections of

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virtual and actual or physical space.30 In the case of my study, I have drawn on the work
of Nelson in conceptualizing communities of choice against communities of place.
Ward, too, proposes just such a definition for cyberspace communities as a remedy to the
bifurcation of space and the sorts of communal life that ensues from that distortion
(1999:96). The nature of the community for cyber-ethnography is that participants
perceive it to be so, and experience the spirit of community (Ibid.:96).
Nelson contends that people join communities of choice on the basis of shared
difference; that which separates and excludes them in their actual or physical community
is what draws them together in the chosen community. The members of webcrones share
the experience of aging, social invisibility and glimmers of Crone consciousness or
identity. The webcrones affiliations are of long duration with at least seven participants
subscribing in the initial year and several more subscribing in the second and subsequent
years. They share an interest in the objectives of The Crone Project. Many of them have
also met in actual space at Crone Counsels and other Crone gatherings organized around
the problem of sexism and ageism with the explicit goal of empowering women in later
life. On the basis of shared interests, values, political and personal objectives they
constitute a community of choice in both Nelson and Wards terms as well as a virtual
community.

30

Like Ward, I contend that cyber-ethnography has the potential to deconstruct the notion of fully
dichotomous space. Rather spatiality is better conceived of as a dynamic and stratified potential or
relativity: physical, social, psychological, virtual, actual, and temporal space as shifting ground of human
cognition. Given this understanding of space, virtuality, the absence of face-to-face communication and
contact, in and of itself, does not preclude community. Therefore, it is possible to identify communities in
cyberspace although every cyberspace network may not qualify.

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CRONE POPULATION AND PARTICULARS


Here I draw a very general picture of the population that constitutes the culture of Crones
from which the women who participated with me in the study emerge. For the most part,
these women are white, middle class, well-educated university women. Within the
population, there are many lesbians who were already out or have come out and are now
living lesbian lives in actual space or who are considering the prospect of coming out to
family and friends. Most of these women are mothers with children and this role applies
to straight and lesbian women alike. They are distinctive in that they enjoy the company
of women independent of men. By that I mean that while many of them have male
partners, they are less likely to discuss heterosexual relationships in their gatherings and
they are less likely to defer to their partners. These are independent women. Many of
them identify with second wave feminism counting themselves as feminists although not
necessarily card-carrying feminists. They are actively engaged in confronting the
double whammy of ageism and sexism both personally and collectively as an
epistemology of aging and they share many values with ecofeminism.
As I conducted my research, I was often confronted with the question of how I
had defined the Crone. Who were these women? What made them Crones? Men friends
regularly responded by substituting a male counterpart: Is that like a curmudgeon? A
coot? An old croney? To which, I would respond: Not on your life!! The Crone
symbolic has a much older pedigree and commands our respect and fear. However, it is
also true that some women who joined webcrones would also query the Crone, quite
early on in their participation: Why do you use the word Crone? Isnt that a nasty term

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for an old woman? Isnt that an ugly hag? Gives me the shivers. I dont want to be a
hag. That was the cue for the netizens of webcrones to speak about the Crone as a
symbol of age, wisdom and power and also of our purposes for joining together in a
collective consciousness raising dialogue. No doubt at that point, some women left the
group, since the politic of the discussions was not their interest; others left because it was
not political enough! Many women would hang in there and come to Crone
consciousness as I am defining it.

Sample Rationale and Demographics


Recognizing that there were innumerable women constituting a population of Crones as I
defined it, I began by surfing the internet in search of Crone traces. Having discovered
many Crone websites, two national Crone organizations located in the USA, one claiming
international status, and several e-mail lists of older women, some of whom identified as
or with the Crone, I set up a website to call for Crone participants for my study. I also
conducted participant observations, focus groups and interviews at two sites where such
women were gathered specifically to discuss Crone concerns: Crone Counsel VII and an
Imaging the Crone workshop. All of the women who participated in interviews, focus
groups and webcrones are apparently white women, for the most part, middle or upper
middle range as to socio-educational status. Many of them are living in reduced
circumstances as a function of retirement or widowhood. They range in age from 45 to
85, although there were two participants of long duration on webcrones, both of them in
their mid-30s. It is notable that after participating extensively for two or three years and

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enriching the dialogues on Crone, both of these women, mothers with children, withdrew
from webcrones citing family and work responsibilities.

Space and Time


Space and time are of consequence to this study since the sites of research confront both
the dynamic of cyberspace, a social space located in Franklins Real World of Technology
somewhere between the bitsphere and the biosphere as well as physical landscapes
ranging from Ottawa to San Diego to Estes Park, Colorado to Egypt and Peru (Franklin,
1999[1990]:166). For the most part, the study focuses on Crone culture, communities
and consciousness constituted by women in Canada and the United States. Nevertheless,
given the potential for Crone activities elsewhere and for Crones to surf the net and
connect through electronic communications, individual participants beyond the borders of
Canada and the United States have also participated in the study. In referring to the locale
of the study, I have opted for the designation America, a cultural concept that reflects the
increasing harmonization of Canadian and American culture and policies as well as the
harmonious demographic of the group.
The social space of webcrones has multidimensional potentials. I have characterized it as a space of choice, a safe space, the space of connection and solidarity that we
think of as communal space. There is also the notion of sanctified or sacred space in
which rituals are conducted as against profane space, the mundane space of the everyday
world. Cyberspace has been conceptualized as a mystified, ethereal space that lends
itself to the sacred. However, the multidimensional potentials of sacred space also surface

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in the actual spaces where Crones gather constituted by them as sacred through the
drawing in of the five elements, spirit, fire, air, water, earth, and fire; the casting of the
eternal circle within the four directions; drumming up the circle and other such rituals.

RESEARCH QUESTIONS
The overarching questions that sparked this study and now inform its implementation are:
What is the nature of Crone metamorphosis and how do Crone-identified women make
sense of Crone consciousness, culture and communities?

DATA COLLECTION METHODS


This project employed multiple methods of data collection congruent with feminist
ethnography, including participant observation at Crone gatherings and workshops,
content analysis of Crone newsletters, magazines and websites, semi-structured focus
groups and a cyberspace discussion forum. An in-depth discussion of the particulars for
each method and initiative follows.

The Crone Project


In order to facilitate access to Crone networks and to network with other women who
might be interested in an interactive dialogue about the Crone, I designed and developed
a website, The Crone Project, at http://www.geocities.com/Wellesley/Garden/3371.
Robin Nelson, a webtender with Luckie Chance creations, provided technical expertise
and coding. I made contact with her through the Mississauga Webgrrls organization. The

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site is comprised of home page, research exegesis, project papers, ethical formulation
regarding the doctoral dissertation, links to other crone sites, and a mailing list page. A
print copy of web documents is included in Appendix I. The website has been the source
of numerous inquiries from individuals interested in the Crone symbol as well as from
potential subscribers to the webcrones forum. There were also queries from journalists
and filmmakers and women who wanted to advertise books and other items that might be
of interest to Crones. Several Crone academics studying the Crone from a range of
perspectives made contact through the site. Consequently, there has been some discussion
amongst Crone researchers regarding a formal research network for discussions,
information sharing and research collaborations. Plans are in the works for a joint
presentation of our work at Crones Counsel XI or XII.

Participant Observation
I conducted participant observations at two Crone gatherings. Here I set out
methodological considerations and ethical accommodations specific to each site. The
observations, interactions, and analyses are described in greater detail in the findings and
discussion chapters.

Imaging the Crone Collectively


On August 15, 1998, I attended this workshop with 12 other women at the San Diego
studio of Helen Redman, a Crone artist. The workshop focused on imaging the Crone
body with mixed media and stressed the collaborative process. When first contacting
Redman, I expressed my interest in attending the workshop as an aspect of my dual

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interest as a Crone and a doctoral student conducting a study of Crones. Two issues were
of most concern to me in this context: ethical considerations and documentation.
Redman welcomed my interest and we fleshed out the following process. As the first
order of business at the workshop, I would introduce myself and explain my purposes
there. I would also provide a brief information statement about the project that included
purposes, and ethical considerations regarding my participation and observations. I
include a copy of the statement in Appendix II, Ethical Provisions.
Informed consent would be addressed in the workshop with the participants, as
would my proposal to take notes of the discussion and my observations. I would seek
consensus as to the process to be followed and gain the assent of the women in
attendance before proceeding further. This process was deemed sufficient for ethical
purposes since participants at the workshop were aware of Redmans feminist politic
and activist approach prior to joining the workshop. Since my interests meshed
with Redmans, my presence was not so great a departure. I followed this procedure at
the workshop concluding with a call for feedback and discussion. There were questions
posed as my research provided another layer of interest in the Crone archetype, which
was the focal point of the workshop. Ultimately, consensus was reached as to the
procedure I had outlined such that I was comfortable proceeding with the methods
outlined in this description. At the conclusion of the workshop, I reminded women who
wanted to receive copies of any papers regarding The Crone Project to provide contact
information. Of the twelve women present, nine of them provided this information.

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Following the workshop, at Redmans invitation, I joined her and Mnimaka, a Crone
spiritual leader in the San Diego area in Redmans kitchen for coffee and a discussion,
which I recorded on tape but have not transcribed. I also met with Redman on August 17
to continue our discussions about the Crone, and how we could support each other with
our mutual interest and shared objectives.

Crones Counsel VII


From October 14-17, 1999, I attended Crones Counsel VII at Estes Park, Colorado, 8,000
feet above sea level, bounded on three sides by Rocky Mountain National Park.
Approximately 350 Crones attended the conference, which was a highly organized event
that included morning sessions for the full contingent followed by daily wisdom circles
comprised of 8 to 10 women facilitated by a volunteer Crone. Afternoons offered a range
of topical workshops, drumming, painting, grief, spirituality and so on. Any Crone with
an interest and expertise might propose a workshop and facilitate it. Since there were
many such workshops and participation is ad hoc, there is good effort in conceiving,
preparing and presenting the workshops. At the suggestion of the organizers, I proposed
such a workshop and was among the Crone authors, academics and others who presented
exploratory or information gathering workshops. These are well supported because they
mesh with the Counsels objectives for critical reflection on womens aging experiences.

CCVII Focus Groups


Prior to attending the Crones Counsel, I facilitated discussions regarding the development
of focus group workshops with the webcrones cyberspace forum. The webcrones

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community had input on the title, the process and the content of the sessions. In that way,
the workshops became a creation of the participatory action research segment of this
study and they better accommodated the sensibilities of Crones. The title designated for
the workshops was Recording Crone Voices: A Collaborative Oral History Workshop.
Participants were invited to talk in groups of 5 or 6 women about various themes
regarding Crones, community, spirituality, rituals, values and change over time (See
Appendix II for documentation). There were three sessions in all with two conducted on
Friday, October 15th and a third on the following day. A fourth session was attended by
only one woman who decided to stay and be interviewed as opposed to participating in
some other workshop offering. A total of ten women participated in the workshops; four
in session one; three in session two, two in session three and the lone participant in
session four. In reporting my findings, I have included the data from the semi-structured
interview as part of the focus group dataset. Since a Crone entrepreneur in the business
of publishing talking books piggybacked onto these workshops, the audiotape is of
professional quality derived from a sophisticated sound system and two microphones
placed strategically in the room.
The workshops used a semi-structured focus group interview format. Prior to
proceeding, I provided an information statement and confidentiality agreement, which
participants were asked to read and sign. I also provided a list of discussion themes and
invited the participants to be creative in interpreting these, adding to them or revising
them to meet the requirements of the discussion. A talking stick aptly known as Talking
Woman was fashioned by one of the webcrones specifically for the Crones Counsel

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workshops. Participants sat in a circle and the stick was passed from hand-to-hand. Once
having received the stick, the woman could choose to contribute to the discussion or
choose not to by passing the stick to the next person. At the outset, we decided that each
woman should hold the stick for about five minutes and this would allow for more
participation. The injunction was very informally monitored. About ten minutes prior to
the end of the session, I signaled to the group that the workshop was coming to a close
and began a sort of debriefing session asking for comments about the process. Was their
anything more they would like to add to the discussion? Would they have liked to
structure the session differently and so on? Some of the sessions ended with the entire
group reciting an affirmation that was posted to the webcrones forum for that purpose,
Claiming the Wise Woman Within, (See Appendix II, Workshop Handout). In one
session, I read the affirmation to the group before thanking them for their contributions.
Upon completion of the sessions, the Crone entrepreneur provided the audiotapes
of the sessions and I had those transcribed in full by my Toronto transcription service. In
addition to these transcriptions, I also made many notes during or immediately after the
various events I attended. Given the ethical considerations involved in these activities, I
provided 300 copies of my information statement to the organizers to be placed on the
information table at the Conference center at the beginning of the conference. This was
designed to inform the Conference attendees of my purpose and interests and to provide
information to women prior to coming into my workshops. In addition, the Workshop
Program Lists in the Conference Package and the Workshop title provided the
information that the sessions would be taped. This allowed for a more fully informed

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consent and participation process and it is hoped that this method avoided any
unnecessary awkwardness for a person who did not wish to have their stories taped, since
they would have the information needed to direct them to other workshop offerings.

[email protected]
While I have conceptualized webcrones as a cyberspace community, the technical format
supporting the community is an e-mail list hosted on the York University server and
linked to The Crone Project web site. The list was established in August of 1998 with the
first subscribers review list downloaded on August 5th. This initial list was comprised of
seven women who responded to the Call for Crones posted to the Mississauga Webgrrls
e-mail list. The call was posted by the webtender of The Crone Project, who informed
me that the word Crone surfaced quite regularly in messages posted to the Webgrrls
mailing list. Dialogues on the list are ongoing and continue to provide a rich source of
data for analysis as well as opportunities for exploring the methodological dimensions of
research on the internet, womens engagement with the new information technologies,
and the potential of cyberspace to facilitate networks, community and empowerment.
Given the broad objectives for the study defined on The Crone Project website,
many topics may enter the conversation. In addition, much of the discussion is expressed
in narrative form. Questions may be asked, considered, reconsidered, answered or
perhaps, go unanswered. This may be the nature of a cyberspace discussion list. Like an
actual community, this virtual gathering has a life of its own and the discussion reflects a
community of individuals. Some people open their mail daily; others are less observant.
Life in actual space penetrates the fringes of cyberspace, so that employment, travel,

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illness, relationships and busy work may get in the way of virtual conversations. By the
same token, women often bring these issues to the list for discussion, advice, solace,
brainstorming, planning and problem solving. Therefore, the discussion list provides a
source of community, compassion, psychological and social support, wisdom, humour,
entertainment and expressions of a deeply felt connection between like-minded women.
As of November 2003, there have been approximately 40,000 messages posted to
webcrones, 60% of which are saved to files on zip disks. These disks will be stored at
Calumet College, York University at the completion of the study. In addition to the disks,
approximately 40% of the postings were downloaded to print copy in deference to Y2K.
Since its inception in 1998, the subscribers list has ranged between 30 and 45 members
at any one time. Women have come to webcrones through chance encounters with the
website during cyber-surfing expeditions or by word-of-mouth from women already
subscribed. I have also netted subscribers through presentations at conferences, random
discussions with women and postings to other cyberspace mailing lists. For example, a
recent subscriber joined the list after attending a guest lecture I gave in a Web CT chat
room for a York sociology course. Once women subscribe to the mailing list, they are
directed to the website to read the information statement and ethical formulation (See
Appendix II, Website Documents).

Content Analysis
As part of the ethnography of Crone culture, I conduct regular internet search and surf for
Crone websites. Given the proliferation of Crone websites in cyberspace, these
explorations provide a way of observing Crone cyberculture in order to gain information,

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insights and intersubjective understanding with regards to Crone social constructions of


meaning. These websites exemplify the intellectual and creative artistry of Crones and
on that account, I have conceptualized them as a form of conscious aging activism. I
provide a brief description and URLs for a sampling of websites in Appendix I. I also
hold subscriptions to Crone Connection, the newsletter of the Crone of Puget Sound and
the Crone Chronicles, initially in hard copy version and now in its electronic version,
which is accessible at no cost online. These cultural artefacts and texts have suggested
new directions for research as well as contributing to the identification of folk concepts
that have underpinned the development of sensitizing and supra-sensitizing concepts.
Along with the miscellaneous Crone discussion lists, all of these activities provide a
fuller immersion in Crone culture and collectivities.

ANALYTICAL FRAMEWORKS
Unit of Analysis
In grounded theory methodology, the concepts derived from the raw data become the
actual units of analysis (Pandit, 1996:1; Strauss and Corbin, 1990:7). The unit of analysis
for this study then is the interactions and activities of Crones through which they produce
Crone consciousness, culture and collectivities. The core concept is morphing the Crone,
the notion of transforming identity from abject old woman to powerful Crone with
secondary concepts, conscious aging and conscious aging activism, the processes by
which morphing evolves. I clarify these contingencies here for their usefulness in
conceptualizing my analytical interests as a prelude to the discussion of intersubjectivity,

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which is a critical component of studies in Symbolic Interaction. As such the focus of


analysis is the dynamic and emergent aspect of social and symbolic interaction that is
examined through participant observations, discussion and cultural artefacts that convey
symbolic meanings analyzed with a grounded theory approach (Prus, 1996:18).

Intersubjectivity
Much has been written about the condition of intersubjectivity, which Prus characterizes
as the quest for intimate familiarity (Prus, 1996:18). Here, the ethnographer is enjoined
to be sensitive to the double hermeneutic that characterizes the study of human
life-worlds (Ibid.:18). This is the notion that making sense of Crone consciousness,
culture and communities encompasses making sense of how Crones themselves make
sense of these aspects of their lived experience. In other words, I must bear in mind that
symbolic interaction is the defining characteristic of social relations in human groups
and I must strive for verstehen,31 the practice of interpretive understanding in order to
make sense of my study of the social world of Crones.
Within a feminist politic, Kirby and McKenna now build on the practice of
intersubjective understanding defining it as an authentic dialogue between all
participants in the research process in which all are respected as equally knowing
subjects (Ibid.:28). The goal then is for intersubjective understanding between the

31

Max Weber first elaborated the concept of verstehen as a practice for sociology building on the work of
Wilhelm Dilthey, who can be considered the originator of the interpretive tradition in the social sciences
since he the first extended hermeneutical conventions to human activity as well as texts (Prus, 1996:35).
The interpretive turn was extended from Weber to Mead and his student, Blumer whose three premises now
define the process of symbolic interaction. The work of Alfred Schutz in devising a phenomenological
sociology based on the work of Weber and philosopher Edmund Husserl contributes substantially to the
elaboration of the concept of intersubjectivity (Rousseau, 2002:143).

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participants and I so that my interpretations remain true to their definitions of the


situation (Glaser, 1992:4; Reinharz, 1992:46; Kirby and McKenna, 1989:129). In this
way, there is some assurance that my conceptual analysis, and reporting of research will
capture the perspectives and real conditions of the participants. This last idea is a
fundamental premise of the grounded theory approach that goes to the validity of the
analysis of data and the formulation of theory.
Kirby and McKenna define intersubjectivity as an authentic dialogue between
all participants in the research process in which all are respected as equally knowing
subjects (Ibid.:28). Thus, the premises of sociological interpretive research are married
to the political project of feminist research. The expectation is always that the voices of
women who have been silenced and erased will now be privileged and that feminist
researchers will not compound the experience of oppression by eclipsing the sensibilities
and experiences of participants as objectified academic knowledge. Given the strategy of
participatory action research, the participants of this project have been active at all stages
of the project from design to analysis to theory building. Nevertheless, there is no
assumption that all participants share the same degree of commitment to the project, since
research is not their primary interest nor did they initiate the project. Therefore, my
commitment has been to a continuous and consistent, scrupulous scrutiny of my practice
in order to ensure that participants voices, viewpoints, cognitions and sensibilities are the
primary source of information and interpretation for the analysis. At the reporting stage,
in particular, my work must mediate the requirements for academic rigor and sociological

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erudition with the requirements of participants who are eager to read my memos, papers
and reports only so long as they are written in clear language.

Grounded Theory Analysis


Given the exploratory nature of this study, the multiple methods, duration and types of
data collected, a grounded theory approach to data analysis was implemented meshing
the analytical insights of symbolic interaction with aspects of the grounded theory
methodology of Glaser and Strauss. The analytical process derived from the constant
comparison of samples suggested strands of received theory, which were meshed with
those derived through grounded theory.

The Morphing of Grounded Theory


Initially, grounded theory was devised as an inductive approach to analysis as an
alternative to the logico-deductive methods of quantitative analysis by sociologists,
Glaser and Strauss (1967:2-6; Glaser, 1992:4). The intent was to develop a systematic
methodology for conducting social research that would avoid the heavy reliance on
hypothesis testing and statistical analyses, which they deemed inadequate for generating
new theory (Glaser and Strauss, 1967:10-12). They argued that the practice of forcing
data to fit preconceived theories formulated on the basis of a priori assumptions provided
at best, a partialized account of a narrowly construed social problem (Glaser and Strauss,
1967:3). As an alternative, grounded theory provided a broad general account of the
social organization and the social psychological contingencies emerging dynamically
from the field of study (Glaser and Strauss, 1967:235-250; Glaser, 1992:5).

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The methodology took hold across a number of academic and professional


spheres. One of its main attractions was the meshing of a positivist epistemology with a
qualitative approach in a somewhat contrived marriage of qualitative values with
scientific principles (Rennie, 2000:1; Charmaz, 2000:509).32 Not surprising then that
succeeding publications from both Glaser and Strauss indicate the morphing of grounded
theory into two divergent formulations that are methodologically and epistemologically
distinct (Babchuk, 1996:2; Strauss and Corbin, 1994; Glaser, 1993; Glaser, 1992; Strauss,
1987.33

Charmaz locates Glasers work within a positivist epistemology and Strauss

and Corbins work within a post-positivist (critical realist) epistemology (Charmaz,


2000:510). Despite a rancorous debate between them on subsequent developments, they
are apparently still playing in the same epistemological ballpark! Nevertheless, the
potential for grounded theory applications underpinned by constructivist and
interpretivist epistemologies is informed by the many studies that have been conducted
within those frameworks.

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I say contrived because Glasers (1992) application of grounded theory analyses to both quantitative and
qualitative data glosses over the dis tinction between a qualitative research paradigm and qualitative data
and doesnt adequately address the incommensurability of the quantitative and qualitative distinction at the
paradigmatic level. In consequence, the dialectical tension between qualitative and quantitative research is
not addressed, let alone resolved by Glaser and Strausss grounded theory methodology nor is it very
often acknowledged in sociological discourse. Nevertheless, the initial popularity of grounded theory
methodology may be attributed to its apparent resolution of that tension. On that account, it has some
attraction to qualitative researchers who arguably want to gain the legitimacy and the access to funds of
their quantitatively informed colleagues.
33
In fact, a rancorous debate has played out in the pages of Glasers 1992 publication, Basics of Grounded
Research, in which he insists that Strauss has so far diverged from the methodology as conceived in the
original text, Discovery of Grounded Theory, that he either didnt comprehend the original theory or was
negligent in study, scholarship and research required to make connections to the original theory, or even
worse, deliberately duplicitous: You wrote a whole different method, so why call it grounded theory?
(Glaser, 1992:2).

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Psychologist David Rennie argues for grounded theory as methodical


hermeneutics and Charmaz for grounded theory techniques as flexible, heuristic
strategies rather than as formulaic procedures (Rennie, 2000:481-482; Charmaz,
2000:510). Given that my Crone standpoint 34 posits the potential for three tiers of reality
my position is compatible with the multiple social realities posited in a constructivist
epistemology (Charmaz, 2000:510). In consequence, I have applied the processes of
grounded theory as heuristic strategies that were applicable for moving the study through
the various stages of the research process. In the next section, I provide a description of
the grounded theory techniques as I applied them to my study. These aspects of my
research locate it within the broad range of grounded theory studies in sociology.

Grounded Theory Applied


Theoretical sensitivity
Grounded theory analysis calls for theoretical sensitivity, which I conceive of as a
complex of expert knowledge, skills, and understanding that inform the generation of
concepts and the potential connections that produce social theories (Glaser, 1992:27-30).
As a student of sociology and a professional social worker, I have acquired many of these
skills and implemented them in my analysis and theory to meet the standard by which
grounded theory methodology is assessed: fit, work, relevance, and modifiability
(Glaser, 1992:00-00; Charmaz, 2000:511). Further, it seems to me that the idea of

34

Feminist standpoint as a critical perspective holds to a historical realist ontology and a transactionalsubjectivist epistemology in which reality is socially constructed and reified or crystallized over time.

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theoretical sensitivity also encompasses the quality of intersubjectivity, which I have


emphasized in my approach to the study and the analysis.

Defining the research focus


The grounded theory researcher does not begin with a problem, but rather moves in with
abstract wonderment of what is going on that is an issue and how it is handled (Glaser,
1992:22). The objective is to locate the problem or the core process that continually
resolves the main concern of the subjects (Glaser, 1992:22). Glasers formulation is
congruent with my study. I began with the insight that I called myself a Crone as I
entered mid-life. I wondered what the source of that identity was and I set out to discover
how other women who identified with the Crone symbol or as Crones made sense of it.
Extending the theme of wonderment and discovery, the standard literature review is put
off in grounded theory until the theory is well in hand although reading for theoretical
sensitivity is promoted (Glaser, 1978). I followed this practice in doing my literature
reviews well after the analysis produced the core concept, morphing the Crone and the
conceptual framework of conscious aging and conscious aging activism.

Conceptualizing
The suspension of the literature review goes to the process of conceptualizing in
grounded theory. Grounded theorists do not shop their disciplinary stores for
preconceived concepts (Glaser, 1978 in Charmaz, 2000:511). This would result in the
distortion and forcing of data. Rather, concepts emerge from the data through a process
of coding and constant comparison. I did not follow Glazer and Strausss method for

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deriving and developing concepts, using instead the strategy of sensitizing concepts from
Blumer, which were derived from folk concepts and evolved to supra-sensitizing
concepts at the most abstract level. In this task, I used van den Hoonards (1997)
monograph, Working with Sensitizing Concepts as my guide. My goal was to keep the
analysis close to the data in order to meet the objectives of feminist participatory action
research for a situated knowledge that would demystify the social context and the
conditions of womens lived experience as opposed to generating abstractions that would
have less relevance and purpose for the participants.
At the same time, sensitizing concepts, themes and patterns that emerged from
the data over time suggested a number of theoretical applications for understanding the
activities of Crones. In essence, concepts from received theory had earned a place in
the analysis as a function of their fitness for making sense of the data (Charmaz,
2000:511). For example, the practice of story telling as a sort of feminist consciousness
raising was prevalent, therefore, the work of philosopher, Hilda Lindemann Nelson
(1995; 1999) relative to counterstories was a good fit. Nelsons notion of chosen
communities and moral self-definition linked to the counterstory led to the integration of
feminist scholarship on power and an ethics of care. These concepts were integrated at
the demand of the data as opposed to the forcing of data into preconceived concepts.

Constant Comparison
Grounded theory methodology is a schema for analysis as opposed to a prescriptive for
data collection. Since I have already set out the data collection methods, I will here
locate the process of data collection in its entirety within the logic of constant

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comparison, which is the heart of the methodology (Dick, 2000:2). Constant comparative
analysis calls for simultaneous data collection and analysis informed by the concepts that
emerge through each successive comparison (Glaser and Strauss, 1967; Glaser, 1978;
Glaser, 1992; Strauss, 1987, Strauss and Corbin, 1998). The notion of theoretical
samples drawn for comparison and for conceptual enhancement is comparable to the
succession of data and analysis produced through multiple methods and sites. The
webcrones cyberspace community meets the criteria for many diverse incidences for
comparison since innumerable women have joined the list and provide a dense textual
dataset for analysis. The dialogic nature of the e-mail list allowed for expanded
investigation of concepts in an indirect fashion, so that I was not leading data or concepts
where I might want them to go. Rather, the list had a mind of its own, so posing direct
questions received little return. Nevertheless, sooner or later, a range of answers to my
unasked questions would surface in the discussions.

Generating theory
I used the process of hurricane thinking, described by Kirby and McKenna in their
version of grounded theory methodology (1989:147-154). Hurricane thinking is a visual
method that suits my learning style. It is a form of concept mapping, where the research
question is placed centrally on the page at the eye of the hurricane with concepts and
categories fanning out in streams of relationships to the question (Ibid.:146-147).
Likewise, Kirby and McKennas notion of living with the data and revising the analysis
is congruent with Glaser and Strausss notion of taking distance from the data
(1989:150). In my case, the data collection and analysis extended over a considerable

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length of time, such that there is no doubt that I lived with the data. Of course, there
would be periods of greater and lesser attention to Crones and their stories, such that I
was able to bring fresh eyes to the analysis.

VERIFICATION OF INTERPRETATION
In feminist qualitative research, the verification of interpretation by participants and
collaborators stands for the assessment of validity and reliability in quantitative research
(Kirby and McKenna, 1989:35). In this study, the participants are comprised of the
women who joined actively in the project and have the interest and experience relative to
the Crone that is the focus of research. In addition, collaborators are individuals who
have knowledge or experience relative to the research focus, but are not necessarily
participants in the research. As knowledgeable confidants, they can keep us on track,
moving forward systematically and keep us honest in the face of amassing data (Kirby
and McKenna, 1989:31). For this project, I was fortunate to have such a collaborator.
She participated initially in the webcrones dialogue, so she had some insider knowledge
of the group. When she withdrew due to time constraints, she wished to maintain a
connection with the project and took the role of sounding board, provocateur, and critic.
There is an expectation that my analyses, descriptions and theory fit with the
participants sense of what is so; that they recognize within my reports the relevance of
the analysis for their lived experience (Kirby and McKenna, 1989:36). In the case of my
study, I have managed this aspect throughout the project, by reflecting back to
participants my understanding of their postings, comments, poetry, activities and

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contributions to the discussion. The reflection of meaning or paraphrasing is an active


listening technique used in social work counseling. The periodic paraphrasing of
statements and stories has proved a useful strategy for stimulating discussion, clarifying
meaning and engendering a critical perspective in the group.
In addition, I also distributed my papers and presentations relative to the project to
those participants with a mind to read them. The sharing of papers allows participants to
validate the representations of their experience and to read and reflect on the analytic
process and the conceptual framework. I have provided papers to those women who value
the process and have a sense of satisfaction in participating in the analysis. They take
pride in their work and scrutinize the writings carefully, which activity occasions many
critical questions and comments. The process cues me to gaps and contradictions in my
thinking; points for further explication and incorporation into the analysis.
The process of collaborative reflection with participants moves the analysis closer
to a plausible and more representative theory grounded in the data. Participants are
outspoken in their views and expect a cogent analysis. They are also able to transcend
their personal stories to reflect on the group as an entity in and of itself and strive
for a story that represents the group process. Once again, the potential for a truer or
closer representation of the lived experience of the participants coupled with an analysis
that gets at the underlying politics of the situation goes to the potential for reliability.
Reliability refers to the trust or confidence we have when speaking about the description
and analysis of our data (Kirby and McKenna, 1989:35). When participants are able to

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see their experience in my writing and the analysis makes sense to them, I can claim the
study as a reliable or dependable formulation of the situation (Ibid.:35).

Triangulation
The multiple methods and field sites that I have employed in the data collection
process allow for the triangulation of findings and analysis as a test of consistency
or veracity, given that the underlying constructivist epistemology remains
constant (Blaikie, 1991:115). For my purposes, it was possible to compare the
results of content analyses from a range of print and cyberspace publications in
order to generalize aspects of Crone culture. Participant observations at Crones
Counsel VII and the Imaging the Crone Workshop also provide opportunities to
compare across field sites on a number of variables. Focus groups and wisdom
circles conducted at Crones Counsel VII yield a richly textured discussion that is
arguably comparable to the webcrones cyberspace discussions.

ETHICAL CONSIDERATIONS
The primary ethical considerations for this study go to informed consent, maintaining
confidentiality and anonymity (privacy) of the participants. These elements have been
managed in face-to-face data collection activities through informed consent statements
and agreements with participants. At the Imaging the Crone Workshop and Crones
Counsel VII where participant observation, focus groups and interviews were the data
collection methods, access was gained on the basis of disclosing my interests prior to
going to the sites. I provided information statements and for focus group discussions and

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interviews, I also presented informed consent agreements that I read with the participants
explaining in detail the purposes of the research as well as the intended uses for data.
Each participant received a signed copy of the agreements and the information statement.
Informed consent statements included conditions of participation and stressed the
opportunity for voluntary withdrawal at any time during the group or interview as well as
withdrawal of any of record of their participation at any time after the interview. They
were also informed of their right to refuse any questions that were not acceptable to them.
Where focus groups were audiotaped, consent to the taping was also obtained as part of
the initial orientation. I also integrated the term recording into the title of the focus
groups so participants would have prior awareness of that condition of participation.
Measures to ensure informed consent were complicated by the communication
format of cyberspace. Communication is less formal and since it is not face-to-face the
researcher must rely on the electronic assurances of subscribers that they understand the
project and are comfortable participating in it. This complexity is offset by the entirely
voluntary nature of subscription. Individuals subscribe to the list at their own volition and
are also at liberty to unsubscribe at any point in time. In addition, many of them subscribe
with pseudonyms or Crone names. Nevertheless, I have posted consistently to the list the
informed consent statements and other ethical considerations including the description,
and aims of the project and the uses that might be made of the discussions. In addition, I
have invariably solicited statements of consent from participants by e-mail and when
these were not forthcoming, I would make additional contact by e-mail to try and secure a
letter of consent. Despite these precautions, I acknowledge that not all participants sent

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forward those statements. Nevertheless, for the ethical consideration of informed


consent, their continued participation signalled their assent. Further, all participants in the
mailing list have subscribed through the website, The Crone Project, where the purpose
of the project and the mailing list are described as well as the provisions for ensuring
anonymity and confidentiality.
As a general rule, participants in the project have done so with a political interest
in promoting critical Crone consciousness and it is notable that many of them insisted
that I use their actual names as an aspect of their activities to promote the Crone and to
increase the visibility of women in later life. This decision was usually accompanied by
a comment such as, Weve been silenced long enough. Its high time someone did know
our names. Despite this position, there are many participants who prefer to remain
anonymous and their wishes extend to all documentation, presentations and reports that I
draft regarding the project. In all cases, whether actual or virtual, I have consistently
conveyed to participants that they are at liberty to withdraw from the list and have their
postings withdrawn as well should they wish to do so at any time in the future. Likewise,
in face-to-face interviews or focus groups, I have apprised participants of their right to
refuse a question or to end the interview at any time they might wish to do so as well as
their rights to request that their contributions to the study be withdrawn. To date, there
have been no requests in that regard.
The other primary concern of research is to do no harm to participants. In the
case of this study, the potential for harm was limited to inadvertent personal
embarrassment or humiliation in the course of discussions and psychological harm that

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goes to self-esteem as an effect of the discussions. The possibility that conscious aging
might be psychologically painful must be offset by its potential to be generative and to
resolve those experiences that surface as a result of the discussions. For the most part,
the women who participated in the study have affirmed the benefits of their participation.
The project has provided a forum for women to share their stories and in the telling to be
validated. Many of them have indicated their pleasure at being so involved and
substantiated the potential of the project for political change.
Participation on webcrones has varied over time, with individuals subscribing and
unsubscribing. This would not be uncommon in actual space given the lengthy duration
of the project. Sometimes, they would provide explanations, which included individual
life circumstances and interests, obligations and time constraints. Some women left
reluctantly at a point when they felt further growth through the community was no longer
possible. For them, departure was difficult and somewhat drawn out. Some of them
returned to the community years later with renewed interests. Still others and these were
surprisingly few, left because of divisive relations with others in the community or
because they took offence to a posting or because the discussion was not political enough
or too political. Then, too, there were always transient subscribers who found little in
common in the community.

LIMITATIONS
One of the limits of ethnography in general is that culture is a dynamic and emergent
aspect of human group life. Therefore, its representation must always be framed in

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retrospect, since the immediacy of field studies have invariably morphed to some new
incarnation. So in its demand to capture symbolic meaning, norms, values and practices
of a particular cultural formation, ethnography is stymied at the outset. Further, it is
difficult to attribute meanings and motives across the various situations that I define as
aspects of Crone culture. Nor can I claim that the findings of this study represent the
meanings that individuals have for their actions, since my focus has been on the social
interactions and group life within the Crone orbit. Therefore, I was able to detect
patterns of behaviour, unifying themes and shared meanings derived from group
interactions. While it is conceivable that individuals may actually hold these meanings
and values, the recognition that individuals represent themselves in particular ways
depending on the social context mediates this possibility. Nevertheless, having
recognized those constraints, there is still great value in exploring the activities of women
in later life for what they will tell us about individual women and their activities in
collective settings with each other.
Another key limitation goes to the nature of electronic communication itself.
Communications scholars and practitioners claim that ninety per cent of communication
is non-verbal. It follows that communication on the webcrones forum is somewhat
suspect and not fully evolved. Likewise, from my perspective as a scholar of cybercommunication and cultures, it seems to me that the sort of messages that pass for
interpersonal communication more closely resemble the inner and partially developed
cognitions of individuals setting them free in cyberspace. Therefore, to constitute them
as fully evolved dialogues is problematic. Nevertheless, they still provide meaningful

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insights and experiences recounted by their authors and must be considered as illuminating the focus of study. Given the multiple methods and sites of research in actual space,
the potential for comparisons in the different datasets offsets the cyberspace contingency.
In conducting cyberspace ethnography, the question of pseud identities arises.
How do I know that these subscribers are really who they say they are? There is some
justification for questioning the identities of subscribers to webcrones or any virtual site
since seeing is believing, and wired women are after all women without substance. I
generally counter with the point that there is little likelihood that too many people would
want to eavesdrop on the conversations of old women or impersonate them. This is borne
out in the general devaluation of women in later life and their virtual absence from
cultural representations. However, this rationale may seem too facile to meet the
requirements of academic rigour. On that account, I can attest to the credibility of
virtually all participants since I have had face-to-face encounters with many of them at
Crones Counsel or other Crone gatherings. Many of the women, whom I have not met
personally, have had face-to-face connections with the women I have met. So for the
most part, there is a substantial network of face-to-face relationships that underpin the
virtual connections of webcrones such that I am fully satisfied that the women are, in
fact, who they say they are. At any rate, that will be the standard for identifying and
incorporating their ideas into the analysis.

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4. DISCUSSION
Crone Consciousness and Communities

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A Cackle of Crones
The following visionary poem is the last in my performance series, The Crone
Poems. -- Lorna Drew, webcrones posting

The Crones Are Flying


The crones are flying
In/formation, cackling as they come
Absurd and true as nature,
Neither plane nor bird
I hear, I see the old crones come
"Take me," I cry
"Old women, elder mothers, daughters,
Teach me to fly
My wings are old, prehensile, broken things
Useless as the appendix
Or the base skull's blind eye"
But I have seen
The ancient organ wake
The bent appendage mend
Old elder bones revive
Seen the sky ALIVE with crones
Heard their old songs
Found comfort in those thin, compelling tones
Old blood songs, older runes,
Tuneless, moriah moans

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EVOLVING CONSCIOUSNESS
AND COMMUNITIES
In this chapter, I discuss the origins, nature and evolution of Crone consciousness and the
communities that are fundamental to the development of a Crone culture. The discussion
begins with the forms of communication that reach out to Crone-identified women in
their communities of place, sparking an interest in the Crone symbolic, drawing them into
Crone communities and networks. This is followed by an examination of the way Crone
communities are constituted and reinforced in Crone gatherings such that Croneidentified women remain actively engaged with the culture and process of conscious
aging and conscious aging activism in their communities of place. In the following
chapter, I examine the symbols, practices, narratives and beliefs and the counterstories
that emerge through conscious aging in Crone communities. When taken together these
elements constitute Crone culture and community and by extension, Crone identity and
consciousness in the world. In the concluding chapter, I draw connections between
Crone culture as I have described it and the theoretical concepts that constitute a theory
of the Crone morphing. I revisit the research questions relative to these findings and
analysis and conclude with a discussion of the implications of this study for feminist
praxis and the sociology of the body, aging and power.

Communications and Networks


Given the geographical diversity of the Crone population and the nature of communities
of choice, voluntary communities premised on shared difference, Crone communication

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is of primary importance to the evolution of Crone consciousness and the promotion and
proliferation of Crone communities. A range of communication modalities are present
including both hard copy and electronic newsletters, magazines, bulletins, as well as
organizational and personal websites designed to accomplish those objectives.
Hard copy publications are distributed through the mails and on information
tables at Crone gatherings. They are produced almost exclusively with volunteer labour
and financed through advertising, subscription or membership fees. For the most part,
they are published by a formal organization constituted to promote Crone consciousness,
culture and community. Some examples of these are the Crone Times, published by the
Crones Counsel; the Crone Connection, a quarterly newsletter of the Crone of Puget
Sound, a Seattle-based organization; and the quarterly newsletter of the International
Council of Wise Women. The pre-eminent hard copy magazine was Crone Chronicles
now publishing as an e-zine. The founder, publisher and editor of the Chronicles, Ann
Kreilkamp also co-founded the Crones Counsel reflecting the close connections between
magazine and formal organization. Buffalo Womans Vision is a bi-monthly black and
white magazine published by the House of Sky Community and edited by two Native
American women active in the evolution of Crones Counsel. Content includes many
articles relevant to Crone culture. Another example of this same genre is New Mature
Woman, also a bimonthly publication established in 1990. The publisher and editor, Win
Findaca is also active in the Crones Counsel.
Most of these news media are published by formal organizations constituted
specifically to promote their activities and events and distributed through the mail and on

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conference tables, community racks in libraries and the like. The exception to that rule
was the Crone Chronicles, a magazine of general interest to women in later life and
nationally distributed in the United States to fine bookstores such as Barnes and Noble,
thus, boasting a healthy circulation of >10,000. In addition to the local audience served
by these publications, they are linked to the more centralized national organizing groups,
such as Crones Counsel and the International Council of Wise Women (also known as
International Council of Grandmothers and Crones). These links promote solidarity
amongst Crone-identified women that goes beyond local communities to a sort of
imagined community of Crones that provides the bedrock on which Crone identity can
evolve. Here, Benedict Andersons notion of an imagined community seems to fit with
the nature of a geographically diverse group of individuals who constitute themselves as
a community through shared vision, identity and purpose (Anderson, 1991).

Vision, Identity and Purpose


As a body of representational work, Crone publications in virtual and actual space project
a shared and consistent vision of older women as wise, energetic, creative,
compassionate, connected, strong, spirited and powerful. The Crone of Puget Sound
statement of purpose exemplifies this vision for older women in every issue of the Crone
Connection, a quarterly newsletter published by them:
CRONE is an organization that encourages and supports the personal unfolding
and passage of its members from past outgrown roles and stereotypes into
powerful, passionate and satisfying old womanhood Statement of purpose
originally adopted by the CRONE Board at the July 1990 Advance; reaffirmed at
each succeeding Advance (Crone Connection, May 2002:2).

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Likewise, the vision of a Crone counterculture embedded in dominant reality premised on


Crone identity and the potential for a deeper reality also surfaces, articulated in the
Crone Chronicles as follows:
Crone Chronicles is an open forum for exploring the range and depth of what
the Crone invokes within us.
In Crone Chronicles we pierce through our cultural conditioning to
encounter a deeper reality. We share stories from experiences, which have taught
us how to live more fully, more freely with more feeling for ourselves and
others. Crone Chronicles honors the wisdom, courage and compassion of the
Crone within us all (Crone Chronicles, Winter 1998-99:4).

By investing the Crone symbolic with these qualities, Crone leaders and
organizations reflect the belief that wherever women gather together as Crones they
generate a dynamic collective energy that can be channeled towards achieving Crone
purposes. Crone purposes are not so readily defined. While the mandates and mission
statements of Crones are articulated clearly in these publications and resonate with each
other, independent voices surface on the pages and the postings and inevitably reflect a
diversity of viewpoints. For example, this quote from a member of the Crone of Puget
Sound, who characterizes herself as ten years a Crone, identifies the competing issues
regarding Crone purpose and vision. At 84 years of age, she is wondering if there is not a
greater purpose than personal development:
looking ahead, I am among a number of Crones asking with increasing
frequency, should Crone not have a mission related to serving needs other than
just our own? I know that the Crone Statement of Purpose dedicates us to giving
up past and outgrown roles, chiefly caregiving, that all too often were at the
expense of our own well being. However, in growing old (and growing up?) we
may find that we enhance rather than diminish our own lives when we concern
ourselves with needs beyond our own. And yes, I know that a founding premise
of Crone of Puget Sound is that we are neither a fund-raising, nor a political
action group. But, does that preclude turning our much-vaunted Crone wisdom
and experience, power and purpose to nonpolitical issues? (Crone Connection,
May 2002:15).

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Crone Spinsters and Web Weavers


While there has been much discussion regarding the technophobia of people in later life,
and there are indeed issues surrounding accessibility to the internet and skills
development relative to computer information technology, Crone-identified women have
established a vibrant presence on the World Wide Web.35 There are innumerable
personal websites created by women who take the Crone archetype, images, mythology,
folklore, and symbols as their focus. Often these sites provide a canvas for Crone art or a
site where Crone Spinsters can publish and represent their individual scholarship,
autobiographies, stories and poetry or reflect on their philosophical, spiritual, social or
political perspectives. By design, these sites inculcate Crone values, ethos and politics
and by the very nature of the medium, they facilitate web surfing to other Crone sites via
the hyperlinks embedded in sidebars and web links pages. Thus, they facilitate a thick
web of Crone connections and networks. Here, I discuss three personal websites that are
representative of a nebula if not a galaxy of Crone sites in cyberspace. In Appendix I, I
have included a more comprehensive list of websites and URLs generated through web
surfing conducted throughout the study and ongoing.36

35

The lack of education and training in computer information technology is a serious concern in general
particularly in relation to large bureaucracies. I had occasion to give a Brown Bag seminar on Crones in
Cyberspace. Three women of Cronely years attended thinking this might be an opportunity to develop
skills in accessing and surfing the internet. After the talk, I did arrange to provide them with a workshop
on web searching at a later date.
36
Given the vastness and ephemeral qualities of cyberspace, the examples I cite here and in the Appendix
are unlikely to represent the entirety or complexity of Crone colonies linked to the World Wide Web.
Some of the sites that I visited may now be defunct; while others may have eluded my web searches
because they are insufficiently linked to the World Wide Web. Still other sites may have surfaced in the
interim between my searches and this write-up.

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Birthing the Contemporary Crone


Birthing the Crone: Menopause and Aging Through an Artists Eyes is the creation of
feminist artist, Helen Redman (Birthing the Crone website). While the site showcases
and markets Redmans art, it goes well beyond self-promotion by depicting the journey
into old age in a positive fashion. Redmans objective is to transform the social
meanings ascribed to older women through her website, her artistry, her exhibitions and
her workshops (Redman promo material). In this fashion, she is conceptualizing old
women as wise and generative Crone[s] in opposition to the abject, infertile old
woman. Her lectures and slide presentations focus on themes of Beauty and Aging,
thus filling the void with representations that actively deconstruct the pejorative
meanings layered on the old womans body in dominant discourse.
Redmans website is technologically superb and easy to negotiate. So much so
that the site was featured in the April, 1996 issue of Wired Magazine, a prestigious
publication for the technophile audience meeting Redmans objective of reaching a
broader audience for her work and her political goals of generating positive images for
older woman to espouse. A central focus of her art is her own rebirth as a Crone and the
birthing of Crone images. Indeed, bones and skeletons figure extensively in Redmans
paintings as does a sense of whimsy. For example, in Birth of the Crone, we see Redman
giving birth to herself, her stern and wrinkled face complete with spectacles emerging to
face the world anew. In her words, she is welcome[ing] my crone, and as I try to push
her out I feel a sense of excitement about getting to know her and as serious as the
face coming out of the vagina is, shes wearing a labia bonnet and the whole thing is

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comical (Birthing the Crone website). Redmans description provides some insight into
the experience of morphing the Crone as an exciting and whimsical departure on a
journey of self-discovery, an alternative to the slow, depressing decline and ultimate
disappearance of images of old women in dominant culture. Redmans Workshops on
Creativity & Aging are featured prominently on the site. These are half- to full-day
sessions facilitated by Redman in her San Diego studio and garden. Women come
together to create art about their lives from menopause through old age individually
and in groups (Birthing the Crone website). A sampling of workshop themes include:
What is Going on Inside Our Bodies, The Beauty of the Old, Inner/Outer Crone
Work and Creativity + Aging = Menopause (Ibid.). It was through her website that I
first learned about the Imaging the Crone workshop described throughout this thesis.

A Crones Credo
Windchime Walker also known as Patricia Lay-Dorsey defines her website as a woman
artist/ activists creative responses to disability, world events and life (Windchime
Walkers website). With that she invites the surfer to share her creative art and writings.
A sampling of these includes My Journal (updated daily), Creative Disability, Meditation
Mandelas, Sacred Stones, and a Crones Credo. A well-maintained Links page
organized in sections leads to Womens Worlds, Womens Creativity, Granny D, Birthing
the Crone, The Crone Project and Ruth Ellis at 100 (Ibid.). Many of the references on
the site promote Crone consciousness and culture and conscious aging activism. For
example, there are hyperlinks to Crone Wisdom and Cultural Transformation and pages

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for the Raging Grannies Without Borders and Storytelling My Life (Windchime Walkers
website).
In her daily journal, Walker introduces her Crones Credo by explaining how it
evolved:
In April 1993, I traveled by train to a WomenChurch gathering of 3000 in
Albuquerque, New Mexico. Returning home to Detroit, my childhood religion
was left on the tracks beside desert scrub brush and the flooded Mississippi
River. Having experienced the communal power of women to embody the divine,
I shed outgrown beliefs and structure like a snake discarding its skin.
Over four years later, at the Winter Solstice, the following credo appeared within
a lengthy journal entry. Here was a winter crop ready for harvest without
conscious remembrance of its having been planted. Once tasted, I recognized the
tang of my lived truth (Ibid).

That she calls it a Crones credo with reference to a metamorphosis of ideas and form
reflects her experience of a transformed identity and a coming to Crone consciousness.
Each of the fifteen articles of the Credo begins with the statement, I believe and
follows with Walkers conception of her transformed self in connection with the social
and the natural world. Despite her experience of multiple sclerosis, Walkers website and
her many activities bespeak her commitment to conscious aging activism. One example is
her role as a founding member of the Detroit-Windsor chapter of the Raging Grannies
without Borders, a group whose protests take the form of street theatre performances of
political songs set to familiar tunes.

The Crones Cottage


The Crones Cottage was created by Marj Franke as a medium for displaying her Crone
sculptures, as well as a tutorial that set out the method for Sculpting a Crone in polymer

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clay. The sculptures are virtually life size and placed in natural settings around Frankes
country home. She described them in this way:
Each of these crones has a distinct personality. Study them and see what message
they bring to you. There is no slick fortune telling computer gimmick here. I am
simply suggesting you look within yourself to that inner source of wisdom these
Crones represent (Crone Cottage website).

BOULDERCRONE

ANACORTESBAYBUNS*

When I connected with Franke for copyright permissions for a poster presentation, she
shared her experience of morphing with me, describing how she had resolved the
corporeal changes of menopause and birthed herself as a Crone through her artistry.
She began with the intention of fashioning a ceremonial rattle by covering a
plastic egg filled with seeds. This task evolved over time and trial to the Crone
sculptures depicted above, which she explains as follows:
_________________
* Pictures reproduced with permission of the artist, Marj Franke .

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All the Crones I made still have seed inside. Not just because I wanted a rattle. It
became a symbolic thing, the Crones, menopausal women, no longer bleed, they
hold their seed inside. It is said that is where the wisdom comes from. After Id
made several of the Crones, I realized that this process was about me turning 50
and getting comfortable with my body. I cant tell you how many times I
went to the mirror and peeked at how or where a fold of flesh was draped on
myself. Then in sculpting it, I was judging it from an entirely different point of
view. From the Creators point of view all bodies are works of art. It changed the
way I felt about my own body (M. Franke e-mail correspondance).

Her words seem to define the process of morphing the Crone, as a corporeal,
psychological and symbolic transformation that renewed her appreciation and confidence
in her own body. Her consciousness raised, she developed the website to showcase her
artwork and to tell her story as a sort of conscious aging activism.

CRONE COMMUNITIES IN VIRTUAL AND


ACTUAL SPACE
Cyberspace is a primary source for stimulating and nurturing Crone consciousness. There
are numerous organizational or group websites developed with the express purpose of
publicizing and propagating Crone philosophy and culture in order to increase the ranks
of Crone-identified women. These sites are replete with Crone symbolism, principles and
practices reflecting the values and belief systems of Crones. Some of these sites are
designed to publicize a real-time organization, promote member interest through
distribution lists and develop real-time conferences and gatherings of women under the
sign of Crone. Others act as portals for a cyberspace community that meets or interacts
through any of the potential modes of interaction available through computer information
technology. These include electronic mailing lists, newsgroups or bulletin boards and
chat rooms. Examples of organizational websites include the Crones Counsel and the

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International Council of Wise Women (also known as International Council of


Grandmothers and Crones). Here I provide a brief description of the Crones Counsel
website and expand on the organization below where I discuss participant observation at
a Crones Counsel gathering.

Gathering the Crones in Cyberspace


The Crones Counsel seeks to reclaim the Crone archetype by creating gatherings of
women who will act as roles models representing older womens wisdom and
accomplishments (Crones Counsel website). Crones counsel values include promoting
equality, encouraging diversity and supporting personal empowerment of older women so
that their value to society will become self-evident (Ibid.). The Crones Counsel website
is a primary source for laying out the vision, values and activities of the Counsel and
promoting Crone consciousness through the features available on the site. For example,
the site provides an extensive description of the Counsel Gatherings including Upcoming
Gatherings and Past Gatherings. A Registration page with an online form linked to a
secure server for payment facilitates participation.
There is also a comprehensive description of the Crone including the
contemporary Crone of Crones Today and The Ancient Crone. All issues of the Counsel
newsletter, Crone Times are archived on the site. Taken together these features allow
visitors to learn about the ancient history and current events regarding the Crone. This
educational function on the site facilitates an evolving Crone consciousness in women
who have surfed the web to locate websites of relevance to their interests. A list of
Contacts provides an easy way for visitors to make connections and ask questions. The

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FAQs (frequently asked questions) link is comprehensive and keyed to the concerns of
older women. One of the first questions addressed was Isnt a crone a disease or a
withered old woman? (Crones Counsel website); the response from Walkers book
redefines the term Crone, Crone is .. the power, passion, and purpose of ancient female
wisdom the crowning triple phase of the ancient Triple Goddess: Maiden/Mother/Crone.
The question Why did you choose the name crone in the organization title? opens a
space for reflecting on the nature of the Crone symbolic, and the political objectives of Croneidentified women:
We are beginning to realize that this third and crowning stage of female life (the
one our culture throws away) is more authentic, creative, outrageous, powerful,
funny, healing and profound than we ever imagined. Aging is natural process, but
it is also very much a womans issue. Resisting the cultural phobias about
growing older begins right at home within our own bodies. How each of us sees
our own aging process can in turn influence how the culture sees it. The term
Crones Counsel was a deliberate choice as the title to signify the intent of the
gathering as a place where older women could share their histories and counsel
with each other (Crones Counsel website).

The interdependent model of Crone communities is elaborated in response to the question


of why Crones Counsel is called a gathering as opposed to a convention or meeting.
From the beginning, the word gathering was used to invite older women to
come together to share their stories and counsel with each other. The idea from
the outset was to have a gathering with no stars, no keynoters, and no hierarchy
of organization (Crones Counsel website).

Cyberspace Communities
Cyberspace communities are distinguishable from personal, organizational and e-zine
formations by their objectives, structure and technical features. Cyberspace communities
promote social cohesion, shared values, interests and interaction between and among a
core group of members that meet predominantly in cyberspace. The core group define

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themselves as a community as do the silent members. Even the lurkers or transients, who
surf through the community website and move on with little interaction if any, define the
community as an entity to which they have no common ground. I have encountered a
number of these Crone communities in cyberspace engaged in discussions and reflecting
practices that constitute conscious aging and conscious aging activism. These include
networking, communication, consciousness raising, social support, information sharing,
social and political activism, and the promotion of Crones, their culture, symbolism,
politic, aesthetics, and bodily images. Here I describe two such communities.

[email protected]
Webcrones is a cyberspace discussion forum, a Crone collaborative circle, established as
the outcome of my initial pilot study on Crones. Having discovered that older women
were embracing crone lives, and developing networks of solidarity, support, information
and communication, I wanted to open a space where I could learn more about this new
identity. I began by creating a website, The Crone Project. The site included a research
summary, ethical statement, ground rules and process for joining the webcrones forum
(See Appendix II). Since its inception in September 1998, there have been over 4000
visitors to the website. Over time, approximately 200 women located throughout Canada
and the United States have subscribed to the list and I have had a prolific correspondence
with other visitors to my site. As a rule, at any point in time after its initial inception, the
webcrones subscriber list has numbered between 35 and 50 community members. I
characterize them as community members on three accounts. Their affiliation is
relatively longstanding. They have posted to the list consistently and in those postings,

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they define themselves as members of the webcrones community. The following


postings exemplify the feeling of belonging to the community shared by many
webcrones:
I am a very new and deeply grateful member of Webcrones . Since going
online 9 months ago, Ive kept my virtual eyes peeled for just such online
gathering places for crones. But, as they say, when the pupil is ready, the teacher
will appear. Thank goddess, I was ready when The Crone Project URL was listed
on the Crone~Wise Woman~Elder website that I was linking to my own site. It
has been like coming home (webcrones posting).

Always a political activist, I envisioned a feminist project: a network for


reinventing the Crone. Certainly, a key aspect of webcrones has been the collaborative
project to reinvent the Crone, to rescue her from the margins and elevate her to a position
of respect and social power. However, I quickly discovered that webcrones has a mind of
its own, sharing Crone humour, silly jokes, some quite frivolous and politically incorrect;
writing and celebrating Crone rituals; publishing Crone poetry of stellar quality; hosting
Crone parties complete with lemonade and home-made virtual cookies; and planning
Crone conferences, virtual and actual. I have come to understand that the lighthearted
humour, the sociability and the broad range of topics are the essential threads that bind us
together as a community. What has been described somewhat dismissively as womens
nattering on the net is in fact the ground for evolving relationships through the
mundane and familiar aspects shared by women in dominant culture (Spender, 1995).37
It is this knowing each other as the reflection of self that opens a space for sharing stories
and getting at the deeper meanings of experience.

37

My online thesaurus lists the following synonyms for nattering: blather, drivel, nonsense and chatter.

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Sharing and caring in the context of the chosen community becomes a political
act of creeping boldness as one of the webcrones frames it:
I have been listening to the tape recorder in my brain. Tonight it is saying
extraordinary things to me; that I have been waiting all my life to be able to
exchange ideas in the way that we are able to do on WEBCRONES. I wish it had
happened earlier for me because so many times in my life, I know now, I have
yearned for conversation with older women, or even women of my own age. Just
to have them take me seriously. Maybe just to be listened to and confirmed.
Do we spend the first third or more of our lives (or maybe for some
women all of their lives) trying to please everybody, and not even knowing
what we are really like? Thank goodness for WEBCRONES, and for the
creeping boldness of the group in sharing their stories, at a time when the world
needs Womens stories more than ever. Thanks everyone (webcrones posting).

Likewise, the following quote demonstrates the process of consciousness raising that
unfolds within the community thus meeting my own vision for a political space:
Thank you for trusting us with your story. How often we keep such things under
wraps, as they would put people off. But every time, I or a friend actually opens
up these secret places, it seems to give others the courage to share as well. That
is a gift we give one another in allowing ourselves to be open and vulnerable.
May this community continue to e a place where each of us can dig deep and
bring up stories of all that has made us into who we are today. How grateful I feel
to be part of Webcrones! (webcrones posting)

Webcrones stories encompass a broad range of topics assembled through a


lifetime of experience from social justice to personal relationships, from disability to
sexual orientation, from personal interests to relationships and family situations, from
childhood abuse to the loneliness of the unattached senior. In the telling of the stories,
narrators and listeners do attend to each others words, respond, reclaim and reinvent
their experiences, individual and familiar in a conscious aging process. There is
agreement and disagreement; and there is difference that cuts across class, ethnic origin
and religious affiliations, sexual orientation, age, ability, temperament, and values. There
is also shared emotion, joy, grief, pain and misunderstanding as well as personal, spiritual

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and intellectual growth that meet the criteria for a community structured by relations of
interdependence and an ethics of care.
Webcrones women are always ready to speak their truth, and care and respect
are common values and practices that structure the social space made sacred by Crone
symbolism and ritual. Crone stories serve many purposes, from tension release to
practical advice; have multiple meanings not always crystal clear and in the context of
virtual space, are strangely disembodied narratives about the aging body. There have
been disagreements and divergent viewpoints, which have led to the departure of a Crone
or two. Others have left citing time constraints or personal reasons. Often the leave
taking has been a slow, protracted and even painful process of withdrawal shared through
the weighing up of pros and cons on the list or backlist. Some women who have left have
also returned demonstrating the significance of the community as a renewable source of
support for them. Then, too, since, many webcrones are acquainted through other Crone
affiliations, extended relationships make sense.

Crone, Wise Women, Elder


Crone, Wise Women, Elder (CWWE) is an international online community dedicated to
promoting equality, encouraging diversity, supporting and empowering each other and
honouring the older woman's wisdom and achievements (CWWE website). Features on
the CWWE site that project and promote a Crone culture include links to About Us,
Alternate Therapies, a Crone Charter and Bylaws including A Mission Statement. There
is also a chat room that offers the potential for reciprocal communication and links to

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E-mail Us and Join CWWE. I was pleased to see my own website, The Crone Project,
cited on the Links of Interest. An interesting feature of the community is that it actively
promotes the linking of the CWWE site on members personal websites although there
are no reciprocal links on the CWWE site. This is a techno-savvy and ingenious way of
promoting the organization. I encountered several member sites and describe just one that
includes a Dedication Page with the CWWE mission statement along with a link to
CWWE and a personal expression as follows:
I am honoured to be accepted into this wonderful group of women who have
found the third stage in a womans life can be the best stage. Their Mission
Statement says it all (www.strawberrylady.com/memberships/ cwwe.htm).

I first encountered CWWE in my initial web surfing and made e-mail contact in
1999 providing an information statement and seeking permission to join their discussion
group as part of my research. I was denied access on the grounds that such research
would be invasive and impede the free flow of communication and comfort level of
community members who were working through the challenges of menopause.
We treasure the privacy we have to share our similarities and differences with
one another I can appreciate your interest in us, for our Sisterhood epitomizes
your search. Unfortunately for you, Crone 2000 shall be as Private [sic] as our
web site (CWWE e-mail correspondance).

This response differs substantially from all other contacts I have made with Crone
communities, which were more welcoming of my research initiatives since they saw
them as evidence of their success in propagating Crone culture. Its about time someone
wrote us up was a common response (CCVII focus group).

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The CWWE mission statement is remarkably similar to that of Crones Counsel in


its promotion of empowerment and honouring of old women. Where it differs
substantially is in the goals of teach[ing] family values to a broad group and fostering
discussions among women and men regarding issues of concern relating to sons,
husbands, fathers and significant others (CWWE website). While Crones Counsel has a
global vision of peace and harmony amongst all inhabitants of the biosphere, their
mission does not make reference to men, sons, husbands and fathers. Rather they
emphasize the lineage of women in their rituals and artefacts. While it is tempting to
speculate on CWWEs commitment to family values as evidence of a more
conservative, liberal feminist or even a R.E.A.L. womens perspective as opposed to the
radical or socialist feminist perspective of webcrones and the Crones Counsel, this would
be speculative rather than evidence-based analysis. What is possible to conclude from
this divergence in focus is the presence of variegated cultures, communities of interest,
sensibilities and diversity in formal organizations and women gathering under the sign of
the Crone.

Crone Communities in Actual Space


There are numerous organizations, groups and wisdom circles that demonstrate aspects of
Crone consciousness, culture and community. Here, I describe one of them to exemplify
the potential of local groups to develop highly complex Crone colonies. The Crone of
Puget Sound is a cohesive network nestled around the Puget Sound near the Seattle,
Washington area.

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Crone of Puget Sound


My first introduction to Crone of Puget Sound was at Crones Counsel VII. I shared a bus
trip to and from Denver Airport to Estes Park with a number of group members. Still
others took part in the focus groups held as part of the participatory action research
segment of this study. When I bid farewell to them at Denver Airport, they invited me to
visit them in Seattle, which I agreed to do on completion of this thesis. I also subscribed
to the Crone Connection, the organization newsletter discussed above. The following
description of the organization is drawn from my ongoing subscription to the newsletter;
observations of group members at the gathering as well as random conversations with
group members during the event and in the more formal focus groups. In addition, there
are a number of Crones from British Columbia who have ties to the organization.
Crone of Puget Sound is a very large, robust group established in 1989 with 205
paid-up members as well as a number of informal participants who attend the various
events organized by the group (Crone Connection, May 2002:4). Events include
workshops, seminars, study circles, potlucks and picnics as well as smaller conversation
groups that meet in local neighbourhoods. For example, the Edmonds/Shoreline meets on
the second and fourth Wednesday afternoon of the month (Crone Connection, May
2002:3). Other such groups include the West Seattle Bag Ladies, the North Seattle
Crones on the Go. From the names of the groups, it is apparent that wit is valued along
with wisdom by the Crone of Puget Sound. Special interest groups include the Crone
Thunder, a drumming group, the Rolling Crones, a choral group and Writing Groups for
Poetry and Memoirs. New groups are always forming, thus the organization offers

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diversity and welcomes innovation and promotes growth and development through
smaller affinity groups.
Special events for Summer 2002 included a full morning program on Dying is a
Family Affair, with a speaker from Compassion in Dying. Such monthly educational
program events are a norm. There were also three potluck picnics that were slated to go
on, rain or shine. A Croning ritual was planned for mid-June and described as an
experience made memorable with flowers, candles, champagne and song [as well
as] the inspiring words of sister Crones inviting you to grow old with a lively
sense of the wisdom and power of Crone Woman (Crone Connection , May
2002:3; 17).

Special events have a draw of about 50 to 85 people, which may be attributed to a sense
of community solidarity along with excellent publicity through the quarterly newsletter.
The newsletter is a source of information and builds community with a
subscribers list that goes well beyond the paid membership of the group. As well as
publicizing events, the newsletter includes the stories, memoirs, poetry, humour, artwork
and a range of other offerings. There are many stories that recount the experiences of the
members at the organizations events and how welcome the company of Crones is to the
members. As well as the newsletter, the Crone of Puget Sound has a raft of useful
publicity materials, an organizational brochure and various event flyers and inserts to the
newsletter. For example, What you might want to know about Crone of Puget Sound.
Topping the list in this four-page insert is the purpose of the group, its history,
organizational structure, financial matters and other vital information for members and

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prospective members. The Crone of Puget Sound seeks to reclaim the Crone as a symbol
of women creating their own vision of how to grow old (Crone Connection insert).

CRONE GATHERINGS AND WISDOM CIRCLES


As part of the study, I attended a number of Crone gatherings in cyberspace and actual
space. For example, I participated in a cyberspace Croning ritual and a Crone party,
orchestrated by the Crones of webcrones. In actual space, I attended a Raging Grannies
Potluck Dinner, a Summer Solstice Spiral Dance, and a number of gatherings for the
Goddess, all of which were imbued with elements of Crone consciousness and culture.
Here I report on two participant observations in which the propagation of Crone
consciousness, culture and community solidarity was central to the gathering.

Imaging the Crone Collectively


In the summer of 1998, I attended a half-day workshop with 12 other women at the San
Diego home of Helen Redman, a feminist artist whose practical action agenda contributes
to the proliferation of Crone consciousness and culture. Redmans motives for
facilitating the workshops were twofold: critical consciousness-raising regarding the
social invisibility of women in later life, providing opportunities for women to create
valued images for themselves as they age in collaboration with other women. My interest
in participating was also two-fold. I wanted to learn more about womens interest in the
Crone symbolic through participant observation and I wanted to steep myself in valued
images of old women.

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The workshop was held in Redmans spacious and sunny studio, a large one-room
building with approximate dimensions of 40 x 30 feet nestled into the landscaping of her
back garden. There were several large windows that let in the light and a number of
working spaces around the room as well as an area for clean up equipped with a sink. As
we walked in, we picked up some literature from a counter beside the door including the
information statement I had prepared. We then stood relatively silent drinking in the
surroundings. Redman had placed a variety of materials around the room characterizing
them as mixed media. These ranged from paints and markers to crayons and chalk.
There were swathes of material, felt, costume jewellery and any number of found items,
buttons, sequins, feathers, seed pods, branches, braids, well-worn clothing and cotton
batten, tinsel and foil and tin pieces, yarn and ribbon, twigs and cotton scraps.
Everywhere we looked on every surface, there was a profusion of stuff as well as the
remnants of former workshops a large figure cut out of brown wrapping paper and
tacked to the wall; a Styrofoam head attached to a wire dress form, a large cardboard box
with a brown papier mach head stuck on top.
Redman convened the workshop by inviting us to form a circle for introductions
and orientation to the workshop. Some of us leaned comfortably against the wall or
tables; others pulled up some chairs that were placed around the studio in an informal
fashion. We began first with introductions, where we come from, what we do, who we
are, why we are here. As agreed with Redman, I went first, summarizing the contents of
my information statement, and clarifying the ethical principles and the use of analyses,
discussions and research relative to reports and publication. There were questions posed

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in response to my request for feedback and some discussion with the general consensus
being that any research that sought to address the stereotypes and ageism relative to
women was valuable and should be supported by the group. These comments were
greeted with nods in the affirmative such that I proceeded to take notes of the process.
The group ranged in age from 43 to 80 with the median age being 60. With the
exception of me, the entire group resided in the San Diego area. They were all white and
apparently, middle class. The older women in the group were retired. Introductions
included names and a snippet of information about the person and their interest in the
workshop. These varied from I just moved from Orange County to the workshop is a
birthday gift from my friend here shared by a 48-year-old. The friend who was 46
confessed that she had no idea what a Crone was. With her background in art, her main
interest was working with Redman. A psychotherapist, 43 years old, was planning a
Croning ceremony while a performance artist, 57 years old was doing the workshop as a
prelude to creating a performance piece encompassing the three stages of woman,
Maiden, Mother and Crone. Whether computer artist, performance artist, writer, or
sociologist, what surfaced in this introductory phase was the groups zest for creation and
the interest in womens aging.

Birthing the Crone Body and Spirit


Redman explained that she was birthing the Crone through her art and then discussed
the Crone archetype and the symbolism of the triple goddess. This signaled another
round of comments from the circle about the meaning of the Crone. The writer, whose
mother had recently died, indicated that she felt the Crone emerging in her with the

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passing of her mother. Another woman, age 51, described the experience of integrating
all her parts, wild woman, wise woman, archetype and Hekate in the process of
morphing. She related the term morphing to a popular music video that used computer
graphics to produce a chameleon-like transformation in the central performer. Other
meanings for the Crone included the marriage of masculine and feminine traits
reflecting calmness and strength of purpose and the notion of women who run with the
wolves from the title of Clarissa Pinkola Estes popular treatise on women. The spiritual
leader mourned the absence of the Crone in her personal experience of aging and
expressed her purpose as getting in contact with her Crone body.
Redman brought the discussion to a close by explaining the underlying
philosophy of the workshops, which was a collaborative approach to creativity. Women
would work in pairs and groups and finally as a whole group to share in the experience of
creating valued images of aging women. The collaboration extended beyond our own
workshop group to the larger circle of all the women who had participated in workshops
at the studio. So the remnants of their Crone creations were all around us on the walls
and working spaces. Redmans words drew connections between all of the women who
had participated in her workshops forging us into a seamless entity through our art.
I now found myself with a partner working at the walls on a very large humanoid
figure roughly cut from brown kraft paper looking somewhat like a childs vision of a
giant space creature. Splayed around the head of the figure, there was an array of gold
foil flowers with blue centres looking somewhat like the crown of New York Citys
Statue of Liberty, the colours emanating a sort of electrical energy. The sense of it was

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THE GREAT HAG OF THE WEST

that we were part of a continuum of women


charged with representing women elders in
larger than life terms. Other women also
formed connections, with a group of four, one
of three and another twosome filtering out to the
various work sites in the studio. We all worked
busily on our creations using glue guns, paint
brushes, paste and pins to fasten feathers and
seeds, twigs and sequins onto the ground of our
Crone images. There was much discussion and
sharing of self as we worked and a free flow
within and between groups with visits to

and fro. After working steadily for about two hours, the circle was reformed and we
discussed our creations.
Turn by turn, the groups interpreted their creations with each woman expressing
the meanings, feelings and learning she had experienced through the process. Many of
the participants expressed some sense of bonding with their group and the significance of
the experience for their own personal development and growth as women. There was a
recognition that mutual trust and respect defined the context of the process. This was
surprising to them, since it was not a goal or thought at the outset. Some words, images,
and ideas that described the process: a journey, a source of regrowth, changing
priorities, transforming, and finding a voice. More direct descriptions of the Crone

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archetype included: temple, energy, sphinx-like, earthy and the Crones


crown, power beginning to find its voice, Crone mother, woman as temple and
ancient guardian. The younger woman who at the outset had little sense of a Crone

MYSTICAL CRONE QUEEN

AGING GRACE-FULLY CRONE

symbolic, now described her dawning awareness not only of the archetype, but also of
the challenges of ageism and sexism that confront women as they age. Her experience
meets the objectives that Redman sets out for the workshops and can be seen as a positive
result of conscious aging activism.

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Following the workshop, at Redmans invitation, I joined her for coffee and a
discussion with Mnimaka, the San Diego Crone spiritual leader who had also attended the
Imaging Workshop. With their permission, I taped the discussion, but have never
transcribed it. Rather, its purpose was to acquire some background on the various Crone
organizations that were in existence at that time and to get a sense of the modern history
of Crones. The interview provided a glimpse into the lives of the two Crone activists as
well as some history on the evolution of Crones Counsel. Both women seemed to concur
on their perceptions of the divisions within the Counsel that precipitated the formation of
a splinter group, the International Organization of Grandmothers and Crones (IOGC) now
known as the International Organization of Wise Women. The point of dissension
between the two groups went to the organizational structure between the central
organizing group and the various local groups. Crones Counsel is structured as a loose
network with the participation of local, autonomous groups occurring on an ad hoc basis.
The IOGC is structured with a central organizing group with local groups formed into
less autonomous chapters. Both of these entities host gatherings of Crone-identified
women in the east and the west and it seemed to me that the leadership of IOGC
continues to be active in the Crones Counsel.

Crones Counsel VII: Honouring the Storyteller


From October 14-17, 1999, I attended Crones Counsel VII at the YMCA of the Rockies,
10,000 miles above sea level in Estes Park, Colorado. Historically, the Crones Counsel
has been held in locations where natural settings predominate reflecting a sacred

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connection with the earth that fits with the reverence in which the Crone archetype as the
third aspect of the Goddess is held. The YMCA facility included a long central lodge of
log construction with large furniture, huge fireplaces and rustic appointments along with
many outbuildings well appointed to host conferences and conventions. Approximately
350 Crones attended the conference. The vast majority of then were post-menopausal,
white, middle class professional women, the majority of them retired. The demographics
of the group were congruent with the sample and population description set out in the
introductory and methods chapters. I saw no black women, Asian or south Asian women
in the large or small gatherings. However, the women were diverse in ethnic origin,
Latina, Lithuanian, Italian, Nordic, Anglo-Saxon and so on and there may well have been
women who had roots in other ethnicities or cultures that were not readily apparent. The
two native women, who are active on the Crones Counsel board of directors, were
recognizable because they wore native dress and I understand that there are many native
women in the southwestern United States who are active in Crone groups.38
In the public and formal events, full counsel, workshops and wisdom circles,
women defined themselves first by their Crone status and lineage, beginning with their
(great) grandmothers, mothers and daughters. Some women also defined themselves by
sexual orientation (lesbian). Since the Counsels are organized by local autonomous
groups of women in the region where the Counsel is convened, in this case, Denver,
Colorado, there was also a strong element of civic, state and national identity. So, for
example, we were encouraged to put any of our questions to a Colorado Crone,
38

While it is possible that there are Crone groups in the west that have been established by and for Native
women in the main, further investigation would be required before such a claim could be justified.

155

identifiable by the Colorado state flag on [their] name tag (CCVII Newsletter,
Thursday:4). There are numerous Crone groups in the state, so the designation of
Colorado Crone encompassed a wide group of delegates. There was also a small, but
lively contingent of Canadians and I was able to connect with them at some of the events.
My first introduction to the Crone participants was sitting on a bench outside the
Denver Airport waiting for the shuttle that would take us to Estes Park. Three women
apparently in their 60s were debating whether pre-menopausal women should attend the
Counsel. Apparently, in previous years, Crones had attended with their daughters and
daughter-in-laws and one of these women was querying the legitimacy of the
intergenerational connections at this gathering, convened so that Crones could tell their
stories and counsel with each other (Crones Counsel website). This put me, a
periomenopausal woman, who already self-defined as a Crone, a bit on edge. The next
day, over dinner in the Crones caf, the discussion again turned to the small contingent of
younger women attending the counsel with one woman suggesting age cutoffs as a way
of dealing with the issue. Again I encountered this topic in the focus groups and it is
apparent that chronological and developmental age is a pivotal point for both defining
who is a Crone and defining Crone objectives. On these points, there is no consensus and
I discuss these debates in following chapters.
On the shuttle, I met a Seattle Crone with whom I shared my research question,
what is the meaning of the Crone? She introduced me to the Crone of Puget Sound
(CPS), an organization of Crones with many chapters. For her, CPS was a source of
companionship, social support, validation and representation for older women. One of

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the airport Crones chimed in that the Crone meant wisdom, while another explained
that a Crone was holding blood and that was a source of wisdom. This was to be my
experience throughout the Counsel. Crones were interested in my research and happy to
share their insights about life as a Crone and the meaning that the Crone held for them.
Nevertheless, I have a note to myself that I must be careful about my researcher role.
While Crones seem to appreciate my work, they see this coming together as a spiritual
and social experience and want respect for the telling of stories and sharing of feelings
(Crones Counsel field notes).
I was able to connect with two members of the webcrones community at the
Crones Caf. That was an exciting moment and we all laughed and hugged each other as
the old friends and comrades we had become through our cyberspace network. I had a
similar experience when meeting the two local conference organizers and the workshop
co-ordinator with whom I had corresponded regarding the instrumental and ethical details
of my participation as a researcher in the workshops. Upon first meeting, we exchanged
huge smiles and hearty hugs as if we were indeed old friends. Upon reflection, it seemed
to me that this sense of comradeship enfolded all of the Crone participants and was a
defining feature of the gathering. We were not a disparate group of strangers hailing from
hither and yon. We were Crone comrades-in-arms, energized by sharing our stories and
honouring our experiences. Thus it was a joyous and welcoming atmosphere and a rare
experience to observe the hillsides dotted with 70, 80 and even 90-year-old women
negotiating the hilly terrain like agile, young mountain goats. All the more remarkable
given that the atmosphere made exercise and breathing so laborious.

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Counsel Programming
The main theme of the Counsel was Honouring the Storyteller and storytelling was a
highly organized event given primacy at the morning and evening sessions with the entire
gathering, at the smaller Wisdom Circles after the morning sessions and featured as a
topic or process in some of the workshops. For example, my focus groups were
organized as oral history workshops where Crones would share their stories and
collaborate on the community story. Other workshop topics included: Sharing Our
Stories Through the Ancient Call of Movement and an Exploratory Session Stories of
Leaving Home. Further, I also attended the Board Meeting convened at the Counsel and
storytelling was an agenda item. It seemed that many of the participants and organizers
wished to extend the whole group storytelling sessions in frequency and length for future
Counsels. This incident signaled that the telling of stories was of primary significance to
Crone culture and consciousness and must be prioritized in my inquiry.
Storytelling was highly structured and steeped in ritual. For example, in the
Morning Sessions, sacred space was declared through a ritual lighting of candles, calling
of the four directions and the three aspects of the goddess. At my own sessions, I used a
ceremonial talking stick as a ritual practice of inclusion and concluded the workshops
with group and individual affirmations. In the Wisdom Circles, storytelling was defined
by the ten constants of the Wisdom Circle (CCVII, Conference Package, Wisdom
Circles). These constants or norms provided a process for conducting the Wisdom Circles
framing them as highly ritualized and spiritual events. For example, Constant One

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enjoined us to [h]onor the circle as sacred time and space by doing simple rituals to
mark the circles opening and closing.
At the whole group morning sessions, women who wished to tell their story were
invited to gather at the side of the stage. Each woman had about five minutes to tell a
story which allowed for a large number of women to participate by telling their stories.
The women began by citing their lineage and then shared stories, which varied in content
and in the performance. There were tales of joy, delight, pain and suffering. These
stories were greeted with laughter and tears and always rapt attention. There was no side
talk, whispers, questions or commentary from the audience. Sometimes, a storyteller
would simply request a standing ovation, a ritual offered to anyone who asks to
receive and experience the appreciation and adulation of sister Crones (CCVII
Newsletter, Thursday:2). Standing ovations were energetic and raucous demonstrating
the unconditional love that many of these women might not receive elsewhere and
recognizing their courage in coming forward to voice their experience.
Wisdom Circles built on the broad themes of the gathering, the events in the
morning sessions and the various symbols, such as the stones we were given in our pouch
or the stones we were enjoined to bring with us to the gathering. The Circles were held
each day and lasted about two hours. Each day my own circle began with a ritual
breathing exercise and round of thoughts and closed with a guided meditation. This
facilitated a sort of immediacy that paved the way for full participation and deep truthtelling (CCVII Conference Package, Wisdom Circles). In such an emotion laden and
trusting environment, participants were able to tell their stories, share their deepest

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feelings and accept the truth of their experience without self-judgement and without
blaming others (Ibid.). While listening to the stories, we were enjoined to listen from
the heart and serve as compassionate witness[es], resisting the temptation to rescue the
narrator. Thus the process was designed to provide opportunities for intellectual,
emotional and spiritual growth for both the tellers and the listeners.

Speaking of Crones: Oral History Workshops


The oral history workshops were structured as informal focus groups within a participatory action research framework. Participants were invited to reflect on the topics, to add
to them and discuss them in view of the research questions developed for this thesis. The
goal was to integrate the direct experiences and insights of these Crone-identified women
into the record on Crones. Each session began with introductions, ethics and discussion
of themes and then discussion unfolded somewhat like Wisdom Circles with participants
seated in a circle passing the talking stick, sharing stories with the view to clarifying and
elaborating themes. Each group was unique with no group covering every theme.
Below, I provide an overview of the themes as they were elaborated in the focus groups.

First Encounters with the Crone


For most women, the first encounter with the Crone was made through word of mouth.
They were invited to a Crone event by a friend: Crones Counsel; Crones of Puget Sound;
San Diego Crones; a Crone meeting on sexuality; a drumming circle; a Croning ritual.
Other points of discovery included Crone Chronicles; a womens studies course, a course
on aging, the internet. The first response to these encounters was wild enthusiasm. As

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one woman said of her first Crones Counsel, it was absolutely unbelievable. It was just
things that I had never thought of before (CCVII group one). The women expressed the
sheer joy of just being with all of these wonderful women (CCVII group one). For
another woman, the attraction was the vitality of Crones. Her experience with so
many older women was that they seemed to [lose] their vitality the minute they
finished menopause and frankly, bored me to tears (CCVII group one). For this woman,
the rituals of drumming, singing, dancing and storytelling with so many old women
together creates a kind of mystery about who we are that is one thing I love about the
Crone (CCVII group one).
Another Crone expressed her attraction to the Crone values of collaboration and
interdependence. It became her vision, a vocation and a calling to create Crone circles in
every community in the world (CCVII group three). Then, she reflected on her
discovery of a whole community of Crones with the same mission, so that ten years later
what is wonderful about [the vision] is I dont have to do it on my own because
apparently it was a collective vision (Ibid.). Her story reflects the beginnings of Crone
consciousness and the proliferation of Crone connections, collectives and communities.
It also identifies the significance of the Circle as a Crone symbol and practice reflecting
the Crone value for interdependence over hierarchy.

Connecting with my tribe


Most of the women strengthened their Crone connections through affiliation with some
sort of Crone community or formal group. The Crone community was a source of
support, friendship, entertainment, stimulation, belonging, personal identity and

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ultimately empowerment for a group of women who as non-conformists through most of


their lives had not fit in easily. As one woman put it, for the first time in my life, I
recognized my tribe, I recognized my people. Id never felt like I fit anywhere, but I fit
with the Crones (CCVII group two). This exact sentiment was echoed by several others
and resonates with the experience of webcrones women who have also been reluctant
joiners and non-conformists. Most of my life and even sometimes now I feel like an
alien from somewhere else. I just don't fit in. (webcrones posting). In response, another
webcrone posts, if we see ourselves and call ourselves Crones, we sure as hell have not
chosen the "accepted" way. Look at the ads. Look at the proliferation of "anti-aging"
products! Yet, in spite of their histories, they stay and that is apparently an aspect of
Crone community and Crone identity, at long last, encountering my family, my group,
my gang (CCVII group two).
This same woman repeats a mantra from a friend, who died at age 107 that offers
a clue to the desire for intimate relationships in later life: You cannot make it alone. I
will go a little ways with you (Ibid.). The Crone community provides a sense of
companionship, and a network of supportive relationships for a group of women who did
not fit in, a group of individualists. As such, it is a source of empowerment that will
take them through the transitions of aging. Thus, the Crone connection has been one of
the key things in my life, probably in some ways has kept me sane because Im not
growing old gently. Im growing old very awkwardly (CCVII group one). Likewise, the
Crone community was powerfully helpful in my moving into Cronehood (CCVII group

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one). This was most vividly reflected in the stories about their support networks for the
sick, disabled and very elderly women and of course, for a dying Crone:
we surround her and support her and take care of her if she doesnt have
family. There was one specifically that did not have family, and we made sure
that she never went to the hospital. She wanted to be right there at home, so she
had to have the care. And, of course, hospice was called in. But still. You need
your spiritual sisters to be with you (CCVII group three).
Yes. And now, one has just been diagnosed with cancer and shes going to have
surgery. And so we told her You cant do it. Were all going to Crone Counsel.
You have to wait till we get back. So that we can support her (CCVII group
three).

Likewise, the webcrones have shared similar needs and experience:


A little story I would like to share. One of our older Crones, Helen, that was 92
this year, died by choice last week. We each went to her when she made this
decision after a very bad fall. She had become very frail. We gave her our love
and respect. She stopped eating and her family cared for her with great love.
She was buried next to her home (webcrones posting).

It is apparent that independent women of free spirit and great age must connect
with a circle of like-minded women to manage the instrumental details of their
living and their dying.

The Power of the Crone in Everyday Life


The groups could readily describe the ways in which the Crone symbolic infused their
everyday lives.
shes [the crone] real integrated. I dont feel like when I come here Im doing
Crone things and when I go home I have to consider how to integrate and include
every client that I have knows that I love the Crone, I honour the Crone, I
started Crone Talk and a Crone Circle and that I come here and that its my
favourite thing to do every year. I think that maybe the way I do it the most
concrete for me may be that I really, really want to do my aging consciously
(CCVII group two).

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One woman defined her croneness and conscious aging as a process of


honouring her wish to experience who [she] was (CCVII group two). She was
able to fulfill her wish to leave her marriage and to live as a wonderfully singular
woman (Ibid.). Conscious aging, for which there is much Crone support is about
living an independent life with the support of a network of strong, women-loving
and Crone-identified women, so she explains, When I came out in the world, I
had a lot of support from women I knew in Crone (Ibid.).
Another Sedona Crone characterized her town as a wide-open heart
place where its very easy to be in your truth and to continue living your truth
Sedona really provides that space and women come specifically to Sedona to
do vision quests and explore their truth and also its a safe place for women
alone (CCVII, group three). One woman felt empowered by the respect and
honour that saying the Crone lineage brings to women: I think its important that
you can place yourself in a line with other strong women. (CCVII group one).
Honouring and loving women, accepting them as they are without trying
to fix them, acknowledging their beauty in stories, rituals and songs in Crone
communities and gatherings produces a deep, intimate connection to the Crone
symbolic and a wellspring of self-esteem that energizes and empowers Croneidentified women in their daily lives. The Crone values expressed in speaking
ones truth, telling ones story and choosing to live an authentic life, in all your
transactions seemed to me to be the benchmarks of Crone conscious aging and
conscious aging activism.

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THE MEANING OF THE CRONE


I came away from Crones Counsel with two disparate versions of the Crone symbolic
both of which have potential as ideal types for aging women. Both of these versions of
the Crone depart from the mainstream expectations for old women. There is the Crone
who can do anything you want and say anything you want and be who you want to be,
or explore and process life as you will it (CCVII group three). This meaning of the
Crone goes to the notion of independence, spirituality and self-actualization; of naming
and claiming self. Then there is the Crone wise woman of age who can mentor the
young about lifes passages and advocate for a more peaceful and harmonious world
(CCVII group three; CCVII group two).
These distinctions have surfaced in the webcrones community as well. The
crone-wisewoman-elder is exemplified as:
a woman with life experience who has the ability to preserve civilization. She
does on a larger scale, the kinds of things a younger woman would do inside the
family unit. So she expands cleaning the home to cleaning the environment.
Putting on bandages grows into being a health care advocate. Telling stories
becomes remembering and teaching the lessons of history. When the world
concentrates on the modern, she remembers the old ways - the old traditions and
cultures and methods and the reasons they were developed and she creates new
traditions and new rituals to give meaning to day to day existence. And she
insists that people value not only themselves but each other (webcrones posting).

The Crone, woman of independent spirit and politics surfaces in this posting from one
webcrone headed A Crone is :

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A Crone is
a woman old enough not to be an eternal sex obje ct;
a woman old enough to have left the land of patriarchy where women
are often required to fit into a box called Sexy, beautiful, pleasing to
men or an eternal mother! When one doesnt fit all those boxes one
becomes nothing to men, or positively invisible (which is an interesting
place to be);
a person who is self assured on the inside, and therefore beautiful on
the inside and knows it;

a person who is most probably a feminist; who can listen;


who may or may not be a mentor;
who is not terrified by cultures fear of fat;
who can love difficult people for the good in them;
a person who has an empathy for people and animals;

a person who can sense when they are needed;


in fact, a person who has been aged by life.

It seems to me then that the social and personal goals espoused by individual Crones,
Crone communities and formal organizations and Crone doctrine in general do not reflect
one seamless understanding of Crone meaning. There does seem to be space to
accommodate the diverse and disparate visions of the Crone and incorporate Crone
morphing into political and personal plans. I discuss these apparent contradictions and
possibilities in the following chapters of this thesis.

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5. DISCUSSION
Crone Culture, Conscious Aging and Activism

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Sticking Your Neck Out


Starlight, Crone of Puget Sound, webcrones posting

A crone is a woman who takes risks


A woman who lives life fully
A woman who celebrates aging
Just think of two Crones we know
Who hiked the trail to Machu Picchu
An adventurous pair
With courage galore
Then there's the Crones who sing and drum
Many of them for the first time
Our meetings they grace
With fun and delight
In Canada and the USA
Other Crones called
The Raging Grannies
Take risks at demonstrations
How about that Crone at Counsel
Who learned to ski
At 80
Or a Crone near home
Who first exercised at a gym
At 74
I cannot forget
Those crones I know
Who come out as lesbians
At 60 and 70 or more.
Inspiration abounds
In every crone circle around
So don't you hang back
Stick your neck out
And be fully Crone

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STICKING YOUR NECK OUT


The Crone poem that introduces this chapter recommends sticking your neck out as a
Crone practice. A Crone is defined as a woman who takes risks, a woman who lives life
fully, a woman who celebrates aging (webcrones posting). In this chapter, the process
of conscious aging as it evolves in Crone communities informed by Crone culture is
elaborated along with the processes through which conscious aging becomes a source of
empowerment for women to act out as powerful Crones in their communities of place.
Conscious aging activism requires taking risks, confronting old wounds, defining self
against the grain of social expectations thus providing a template for social
transformation. It is a process defined by the poem Sticking Your Neck Out. Therefore,
no clear-cut boundary can be drawn between conscious aging in a Crone community and
conscious aging activism in communities of place. The two processes are symbiotic and
engender each other in an evolving process of psychological and cognitive development
that manifests in a Crone identity. Therefore, I have chosen in this chapter to focus on
the ways that culture and counterstories emerge in Crone communities and gatherings to
empower Crone-identified women in their conscious aging and conscious aging activism.
The following and final chapter of this thesis draws connections between the conceptual
framework derived through this analysis and the initial research questions that framed
this study.

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SOCIAL INVISIBILITY
I begin with the experience of social invisibility, which is a precipitating factor that
motivates women to engage in conscious aging and conscious activism, the symbiotic
processes of transforming identity and morphing the Crone. I have found that scholarly
theories of social invisibility as a defining condition for old women in dominant culture
are reiterated in the stories of Crone-identified women. There has been much discussion
of social invisibility on the webcrones cyberspace community. In a posting defining the
meaning of the Crone, a webcrone makes the following observation:
I once had a beautiful, tall blond ask me what I meant by invisible? I could
only say You will know when you get there! (webcrones posting)

Her words express the isolation felt by old women whose standpoint is incomprehensible
from other social locations within dominant culture. One posting provides a particularly
rich description of the multiple ways that invisibility can be experienced:
I have talked to hundreds of older women with gray hair, who are also
experiencing what I am about to describe, so I know its not just me!
a) Being "overlooked" by clerks, who walk on by to wait on someone else; b)
Having what I say ignored by groups of younger folks, as if I hadn't spoken; c)
Being "brushed off" by doctors who seem bored by us; d) Being "brushed off"
period! (webcrones posting)

Another webcrone responds in kind:


It is not that you are "almost" invisible - you are invisible! No young person can
see anyone over 50 being of any use or interest to them - so they ignore us
because they can't see us! (webcrones posting).

This exclusion extends to the market place for popular culture and commodities:

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The first time I felt I was close to the top of the hill was, like several of you,
when the cloak of invisibility seemed to surround me, especially when I was in
some of the more, trendy, youth-oriented stores (webcrones posting).

In the Crones Counsel VII focus groups, the women also acknowledged
the occurrence of social invisibility, reflecting on attitudes towards older people:
I definitely have experienced it and actually take notice when I do it. And I
remember someone, I think it might have been Ann Kreilkamp in a group once
said that she just would get really upset with herself because she noticed that she
would be walking right past older people, not just women but men too, and
realizing that those were the invisible people that the rest of society would [not]
look at them. And shed have to stop herself. And Ive noticed the same thing.
What is really easy about Crone Counsel is that that never even comes up here
(CCVII group three).

It is apparent from this womans comments that she had previously participated in a
dialogue about social invisibility in a Crone circle. As a result, she had a somewhat more
critical perspective on social invisibility. Her sensibilities precipitated a process of
critical reflection on invisibility in the focus group that exemplifies the process of
conscious aging in a Crone circle. Another woman was prompted to reflect tentatively on
the meaning of social invisibility with a dawning recognition that it is a sort of cultural
blindness that obstructs the vision even at Crones Counsel:
Now its funny that you mention that because when I think of our wisdom circle,
we have one older woman of over 80. She came the first evening. She obviously
had problems. We had problems with the meeting space the second time. She
finally found us when there was about 10 minutes left or something. And she
never came back. So I dont know why, and I dont even know if anybody ever
thought about it after that, and to me that is the invisibility of old age, of the
older, older person. Its just come to me now (CCVII group three).

Another woman commented that someone should seek her out and find out what the
problem was if there was one. Could be that she was tired and decided that she was
going to take that time to rest (CCVII group three). To which the first woman replied

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she had a really hard time getting around. You know, I never even thought about it till
we had this discussion (CCVII group three).
In focus group one, a woman described her experience of being ignored by
young people that dont look at me. Her response since getting involved with Crone
is to act different about other old women in stores and restaurants. This suggests that
she too has shared in the process of conscious aging in a Crone community. Her new
approach to older people exemplifies the process of conscious aging activism:
I think with people in the store, I have some funny thing or joke to say to them
and theyre trudging along trying to get the groceries and everything, and I think
you can bring joy into somebodys life. I mean I dress up in a clown outfit and go
into grocery stores and people are really weird when they see me. And thats just
wonderful fun. Its just wonderful fun (CCVII group one).

While most webcrones agreed that at some point in their lives, they had
experienced the effects of social invisibility, their responses to that condition varied
considerably. Some of them resented the condition, as indicated by this comment:
Next time you go to a bookstore to look for a book or magazine on womens
issues, aging, croning, don't expect to find a large selection. We, [older] women
are the most neglected group in these United States of America (webcrones
posting).

Others welcomed there invisibility as a release from the stereotypical roles ascribed to
young women:
I do [accept invisibility]. I welcome it. In the social perception, I've switched
from being a woman to being a person. I don't get stared at and whistled at and
groped, I don't get put down and patronized and stereotyped. I'm no longer
tempted to live up to those social perceptions. The outspokenness that generally
increases with age is heard more now because the social perception isn't hearing
us through the filter of gender stereotypes (webcrones posting).

Still others refocused their perceptions with a Crone standpoint. So one woman
describes taking hold of the experience and bending it to her will: I, for a while, was

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bemoaning the invisibility of the old. I then firmly decided that the invisibility was of my
making. I am not invisible, and never will be (webcrones posting). This particular
woman, now 85 years old, seems to be expressing her determination to live life on her
own terms. She is an educated woman, a former teacher, a well-known social activist, a
weight lifter and a poet. Yet, there is no denying that at some point in her life she too felt
the effects of social invisibility. In a later posting, she explains that her renewed
visibility rested in morphing the Crone:
On the subject of becoming a Crone: Each in her own good time, I'd say. Being
a Crone is a way out of the invisibility of old age. You only have to say 'yes'
when you really feel ready to celebrate a Crone status! To me it acknowledges
my collection of years, which I am now proud of (webcrones posting).

Here two Crone-identified women reframe their experience of invisibility as an


opportunity for Crone confrontation or conscious aging activism:
I make myself visible. All my mothers teachings on sparing people's feelings
have gone out the window. If I get the invisible treatment I become visible
they cannot ignore me, because I am right there, in their face demanding their
attention! (webcrones posting)
I like bringing the word OLD to the forefront. "Excuse me, have you been
ignoring me because you think I'm an old woman who (appropriate phrases here
isn't going to spend much, isn't important? has nothing else to do, etc., etc.)
(webcrones posting)

CONSTITUTING CRONE CULTURE


AND COMMUNITIES
In this thesis, I have defined Crone culture as a counterculture constituted in resistance to
the dominant hegemonic culture of western patriarchal capitalism. This section elaborates
on some of the significant elements of Crone culture symbols, artefacts, narratives,

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rituals and practices that shape Crone communities. The description also captures insofar
as possible the process of conscious aging as it ensues in Crone communities through the
cultural practice of storytelling. Many of these stories are just so stories recounted for
human interest, entertainment and sociability. Just as many are counterstories, narratives
that contribute to the moral self-definition of the teller by deconstructing the stories of
dominant culture, retelling them to promote different objectives and outcomes. Taken
together these stories generate a community counterstory establishing Crone culture as a
radical, transformative counterculture and birthing the Crone as a powerful entity in the
social world (Nelson, 1995:23).
Sparked by second wave feminism and particularly, the feminist spirituality
movement, Crone culture has evolved with a rich symbolic system, a material culture, a
set of ritual practices and a well defined core narrative or community counterstory
derived from disparate sources including the womens liberation movement, second wave
feminism, feminist and New Age spirituality, and the goddess lore of folk cultures across
the globe. These cultural elements provide a frame of reference and a logic through
which women can actively constitute a Crone identity and cultivate a Crone standpoint
that deconstructs the hegemonic meanings layered over the female body in dominant
culture. This is the process and objective of Crone conscious aging.

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Crones and Archetypes


In the introductory chapter ofthis thesis, I suggested that the Crone archetype provides a
cultural icon,39 an ideal type and role model that women in later life can draw on to create
and project a strategic identity. In that regard, the Crone must meet the contradictory
demands of an intellectually diverse group of women who gather under her sign. Here, I
discuss some of the competing dimensions of the Crone and set out the process of
evolving a counterstory about her. The Crone as the third aspect of the triple Goddess,
maiden, mother, and crone is perhaps the original source of contemporary Crone
symbolism, ritual practices and mythology. Thus a webcrones woman completing a
Masters degree in Womens Spirituality links the Crone phenomenon to the Goddess and
spirituality:
I believe that women who identify themselves as Crones seem to have a
connection to spirituality. The Crone is part of the Goddess, and that is how the
Crone became an archetype, which is what we who identify as Crones are
tapping into (webcrones posting).

Moreover, Crone-identified women are symbolically invested with the qualities


represented by the Crone Goddess. Through Crone rituals and gatherings, Croneidentified women share in the positive, joyful affirmation of the female body and its
cycles and acceptance of aging and death as well as life (Christ and Plaskow, 1992:
282). The following webcrones posting exemplifies this dimension linking the Crone to
Gaia, the earth goddess, drawing on the traditional female roles as arbiter of nature and
nurture.

39

Here the term cultural icon reflects the definition of subjectivities given in Chapter II, culturally derived
positions signified through a politicized process of representations, constructions and reconstructions.

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A Crone is the fully realized daughter of Gaia. Her ecological niches are filled,
generating a self sustaining system. She doesnt give a hoot about what anyone
else thinks of her. She is confident in her own wisdom. She is self-nurturing. She
holds life with reverence (webcrones posting).

A second dimension of the Crone is drawn from Jungian psychotherapy. Both the
Crones Counsel and Crone Chronicles along with many Crone publications draw
connections between the contemporary Crone-identified woman and a Crone archetype.
For example, both the Crones Counsel and the Crone Chronicles espouse the goal of
reclaiming the Crone archetype (Crone Times, 2002:2; Crone Chronicles masthead).
The term archetype has a life as a conceptual category in Jungian psychotherapy. Davis
characterizes the Jungian archetype as preconscious psychic dispositions that provide a
template for humans to create themselves and react in a human manner. (Jung in Davis,
2000). At the level of the unconscious, there are a limited number of archetypes, but at
the conscious level there are an infinite variety of specific images that point back to
these few basic patterns (Ibid.).40 The rendering of archetypal motifs as images occurs
through dreams, myths and symbols, exemplified by Crone narratives and mythologies
of the Crone (Jung, 1964:58). Since many Crone-identified women and second wave
feminists subscribe to Jungian theory their affiliation with the Crone reflects a
conscientious process of rendering a Jungian archetype into social consciousness.41 For
them, the process of Croning the archetype involves elaborating or imaging the old

40

Given the notion that humans render an infinite variety of symbolic images pointing back to a few basic
patterns, I have privileged the Crone as the primary symbolic image for the old woman archetype, but I
have also included such terms as Hag and Raging Granny as variations on the Crone.
41
Perhaps Jungs formulation of the animus and anima archetypes as instinctual traces that cohabit
within all humans regardless of sex/gender is an appealing idea for feminists because it provides some
purchase for destabilizing hierarchical bifurcations of human being.

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woman as a wise and powerful being (Mantecon, 1993:79). The following posting to
webcrones illustrates this point:
I are Crone learned about the Wise Old Woman from Jung and learned it was
Crone when I took the Cakes for the Queen of Heaven course for the first time
figured I wasnt really wise at all, but might get that way if I talked to other
Crones (webcrones posting).

In my investigation, I found there were many Crone-identified women who


worship the triple goddess with a seemingly equal number of women whose connections
to Crone are not so sacrosanct. For example, one woman proclaimed that
I didnt even know about goddess when I came into Crone. I mean I knew that
Crone was the wise woman of age and that there was a triple goddess, but that
didnt mean anything to me really. It was the aspect of the older women that
really interested me. (CCVII group three).

Another woman proudly passed a business card with the designation, Goddess
Extraordinaire around her Crones Counsel focus group. Having attended this Crones
Counsel, her first, she was now planning to change the designation to Crone
Extraordinaire and celebrate her rite of passage with a formal Croning Ceremony
(CCVII group one). This somewhat irreverent approach to the Goddess seems to more
closely fit Goffmans notion of an interpersonal ritual in recognition of her sacred self
than any expression of reverence to a sacred deity (Shilling, 1993:85). It also fits with
the concept of rendering the archetype of the old woman as a living goddess.
In Crones Counsel focus group three, while some women spoke about the
spiritual connections of Crone community, the difference between Crone groups and
other circles of women is the spirituality, spirituality transcended traditional forms of
worship (CCVII group three). Thus another woman recounted the story of her friends,

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devout Christians, who came to Crone a couple of times, but did not continue because the
goddess influence was like youre worshipping a goddess or something screwy like
that (CCVII group three). Nevertheless, this same woman agreed that spirituality was
fundamental to Crone gatherings. Another woman described the experience of
discover[ing] that I, along with all women are goddesses, [as] a very pivotal changing
time in my life. (CCVII group one). A third woman defined the Crone as an identity
that you grow into and you know that all old women, whether they call themselves crones
or not, are crones (CCVII group three).
These comments distinguish between a Crone deity, the third aspect of the
Goddess and a Crone living goddess, a generic symbol of the divine in everywoman. So
while there are many women for whom the Crone is worshipped religiously as a deity, for
just as many others, the Crone is a strategic identity that stakes a claim to wisdom,
spirituality and metaphysical propensities for all women. That is the spirit of one
webcrones posting:
Just the presence of a Crone opens my mind spiritually. What fun it would be to
have a Crone convention! I would be willing to go bankrupt just to stand in a
room full of Crones (webcrones posting).

Yet another webcrone attests to connections between Crone-identified women,


whatever the source of their inspiration:
I am a Goddess woman, so I attribute my insight to the Goddess letting me know,
beyond a shadow of doubt, that all will be well. Others might attribute that
knowing to a different source, and whatever source you know, you will
understand my feelings (webcrones posting).

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Conscious Aging: Coming to Crone Consciousness


The notion of coming to Crone consciousness is a phrase that reflects my sense of the
emergent nature of Crone identity. Crone consciousness is in the process of becoming;
an ongoing strategic and creative effort to get at meanings that have been naturalized in
dominant culture, therefore, taken for granted without question. The range of meanings
and qualities ascribed to the Crone by Crone-identified women suggests the potential for
a radical, transformative identity for old women and becomes a focal point for telling and
retelling the community counterstory, which is the defining story of the powerful Crone.
For example, the notion of the Crone Goddess, qualifies as a counterstory in Nelsons
terms because it permits the tellers to reenter as full citizens, the communities of place
whose goods have been only imperfectly available to its marginalized members (Nelson,
1995, 23). The Crone Goddess legitimates the claims to bodily integrity and spirituality.
Nevertheless, on webcrones, a vigorous dialogue was raised regarding the idea of
rites of passage that deify the fertile mother or the venerable Crone. One woman
challenged the notion of a biological frame of reference as a defining credo,
I look at my aging process as the increasing polish on my badge of experience
and knowledge rather than loss of fertility (that is a strange idea to me, who spent
my entire reproductive life suppressing this capacity) (webcrones posting).

Another webcrone also shared her deep discomfort with the Maiden, Mother, Crone
configuration relating it to her lived experience. Unable to have children after a
hysterectomy in her teens, she pointed out that there were many, many women who were
not mothers, concluding that the Crone as a symbol for aging women must be more
inclusive (webcrones posting).

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In response, the suggestion that womens mothering roles should transcend the
birthing and nurturing of children encompassing womens creativity and nurturing of the
planet and all of life thereon came forward (webcrones posting). This approach reflects
a more general Crone mythology of women as nurturers, and sources of spiritual
connection with the biosphere and its diverse inhabitants. The Crone Manifesto describes
this characterization of women as a lifetime of commitment to caring and listening and
connecting (webcrones posting). Certainly, these objectives shared by many Croneidentified women open a space for revaluing womens traditional roles.
Despite this rationale, feminist resurrections of the triple Goddess that aim to
sanctify the female body also reinforce dominant definitions of femaleness relative to
fertility and nurturing. Likewise, the eco-Crone discourses that claim a special affinity
for women and nature share a similar critique. However, since they also reflect and
resonate with the lived experience of many Crone-identified women, it is politically
counterproductive to discount these frames of reference, since it is through them that the
counterculture emerges. Theoretically, it is these very traditions of womens experience
that inform the claim to a womans standpoint and ethics of care that are fundamental to
my interpretation of Crone morphing. This is not a new dilemma for feminist praxis nor
is it easily resolved. Since women have been symbolically naturalized and embodied
in dominant discourse, these elements must be politicized and critically resolved.
However, it is the underlying tendency to hierarchical, dualistic constructions that
devalue womens nature that must be resolved as opposed to any inherently female
capacities claimed by individual women. The morphing process within Crone

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communities provides a non-hierarchical model of social relations while the practice of


telling stories and the concept of the counterstory provide a collaborative approach to
resolving dualisms and broadening the possibilities self-definition.
On webcrones, this dilemma has been confronted with the view to finding
alternative dimensions of the Crone that do not replicate traditional hierarchies or
reinforce biological essentialism. For example: Ive been thinking once again about the
meaning of the Crone. I have difficulty seeing myself as a Crone, despite my age (78),
because Im still trying to explain Crone to myself. A response to this posting identifies
the problem of Crone symbolism for feminist praxis:
I share some of your discomfort with the crone title , and am not fully clear on all
the reasons. The way I hear it generally defined, one thing I can say is that the
hierarchical flavour bothers me...like a Crone is somehow wiser than and
more than non- crones in a different category, whatever. Even if it's true it
still bothers me! (webcrones posting).

This discomfort with the Crone is reflected in the reluctance some webcrones have in
committing to Crone whole cloth. This ambivalence extends to the webcrones
community, and is often expressed as not fitting in, its time for me to leave this
circle and I rarely contribute because this is not meaningful to me. Yet, by their
presence over extended periods of time, as well as their comings and goings, these same
women are Crone-identified and derive some meaning or benefit from belonging to a
Crone community and engaging in the process of evolving a more critical Crone identity
for self and society in general.
For example, the construct of a Crone Elder or Wise Woman Crone, prevalent in
Crone lore, offers other dimensions for consideration. The notion of the Crone Elder is

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attractive since it suggests a resolution to dualistic definitions: I prefer elder for the
species, and crone to designate women of that species. What do you like? (webcrones
posting) This brings forward the response:
Elder, I think, is preferable, since in [many] societies, the elders are revered and
ancestors worshipped, rather than seen as old and a burden. Perhaps, friends, we
could come up with an enhanced Crone term. Any ideas? (webcrones posting).

These questions inspire a flood of postings fleshing out the qualities of Crones and the
symbolic roles that Crones might fulfill. Crone-ish qualities include wisdom, depth,
patience, spirituality, single-mindedness, autonomy, and so on (webcrones postings;
CCVII focus groups). The role of the Crone is seen as one of mentorship and guidance:
I do consider myself a crone, if a crone is a woman of the third age who believes
she must serve as a mentor and as an example. As one of a very few crones who
are technically proficient as well as being an artist, I provide computer and
design mentoring free for all who ask; I especially try to help other older women
become computer literate and Internet proficient (webcrones cybergrannie

posting).
For the most part, webcrones discussions focus on identifying valued Crone
characteristics in order to evolve a Crone identity, and there is some reluctance to define
oneself in opposition to other women although occasionally a posting draws such
boundaries:
The women in womens studies programs dont know they are crones and not all
older women are crone. If you want to look younger, e.g. have a face-lift, etc.,
you are not crone (webcrones posting).

This sort of posting raises the response from others that those women are not yet
Crones alluding to the potential of conscious aging and conscious aging activism to
morph the Crone.

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Ultimately, not every Crone-identified woman takes on a Crone identity. Their


stories reflect ambivalence with respect to their own croneliness, while still respecting
the Crone in others. They espouse Crone values and value their connections within
Crone communities. Their participation evokes Halls notion of strategic identifications,
temporary subject positions that serve personal and political purposes (Hall in Hall and
DuGay, 1996:6). For example, in a lengthy posting, which I excerpt here, a webcrone
woman posts that after a long process of reflection, and despite having a Croning
ceremony at age 60, she is now giving back the Crown:
I think the reason I cannot fully fit myself into the Crone identity, or feel full
sisterhood is because Im not purely or exclusively female, genderwise. Nor
do I fit in the male world, for the same reason. In fact, I no longer believe there
are only two genders at all?
So, (is this a first on the list?? I now lay down before you my Crone crown,
once and for all. I dont know what to call myself but I am really not a
Crone, and now I know it? There are so many other beautiful heads that can
wear that crown more comfortably than I can. (I never could stand anything on
my head anyway!) [Smileys were included in the original message]

(webcrones posting)
To which, another woman, a self-proclaimed Crone responds: Wow! How did that
make you feel to let all that out? I feel that it clarified things for you. Is that right?
(webcrones posting).
Her response was insightful: Ive pretty well come to inner peace (and yes,
celebration) with it all, but it did feel good to write it out like that! The fact is that I
really like not belonging neatly into any categories!! (webcrones posting). The woman
has been a webcrones community member for five years. In that time, she has joined and
left and rejoined again. She is drawn to the webcrones community by the nature of its
social relations, interdependence and an ethics of care, and in her words, for the

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appreciation and validation that she draws from the community (webcrones posting).
She has told her stories, reflected on them critically informed by the insights of the
community and this has empowered her to come to terms with herself within the moral
space that the community of Crones provides. Despite that reality, she still likes a little
space, a sort of disconnect. This is the lived experience and perhaps, the learned
experience of a lifetime. Her story is one small slice of the counterstory of the Crone
body, which I set out in detail in the last section of this chapter.

SYMBOLS, RITUALS AND PASSAGES


The Circle
A predominant feature of Crone gatherings is the circle, a symbolic and social
configuration. For example, the Imaging the Crone Workshop began and ended with a
conversation circle and a webcrones posting reflects the symbolic meaning invested in
the circle as well as its empowering potential as a social configuration:
A favourite quote of mine: We are a circle within a circle, with no beginning and
no end spiralling in with life and with love out and back again.

As it is described, the circle seems never-ending in its structure and defines a collective
we establishing both the boundaries and the substance of the community. It is often
cast in a ritual fashion by calling up the four directions or performing a native smudging
ceremony. Should a person have to leave the circle, there is often some ritual practice for
opening the circle and ritual practices attend the closing of the circle at the time as well as
at the conclusion of the gathering.

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At Crones Counsel VII, daily Wisdom Circles were structured by Ten Constants
of the Wisdom Circle summarized from a book entitled Wisdom Circles. The book is a
recognizable standard reflecting the values and norms of the circle formation. Constant
One bid us Honour the circle as sacred time and space and provided some suggestions
for rituals for casting the circle. The experience of sharing stories, speaking ones truth,
in the circle formation is intimate and emotion-laden. Most certainly, an aspect of
creating a powerful space and spiritual connection can be attributed to the rituals that
structure the experience. However, the very formation itself is a source of empowerment
since it espouses a non-hierarchical consensual model of governance by its very structure.
The Crone of Puget Sound claims to [b]uild community through conversation
groups structured in circles (Crone Connection, August 2000:12). They begin by holding
hands in the circle, lighting a candle, and taking a couple of minutes to share two or three
good things that have happened since they last met (Crone Connection, August 2000:12).
They close by holding hands and complimenting the woman on the left, then in unison,
wishing the entire circle good health till we meet again (Ibid.). One of the constants of
their circles is respecting the choice of each woman to contribute or not. Another is to
[d]evelop a circle of trust by keeping confidential the interactions in the circle (Ibid.)
Other constants value growth, respect, relationships and support through adversity (Ibid.).
At Crones Counsel, a woman described the inclusiveness of the decision making circle in
her San Diego Crone group, a community with a five-year history:
They put the altar in the middle of the circle. They have the talking stick. They
have drumming before every meeting for five or ten minutes. And then the most
interesting thing for me is that every January we sit around and decide what the
topics for every month are going to be and who is going to lead them. Now, 45

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women trying to decide this! I thought this was not going to happen, but weve
done it (CCVII group two).

She went on to discuss the topics, which included sexuality, memory, grieving and she
concluded: Weve had, you know, just a lot of very powerful meetings (CCVII focus
group two). At the same time, she alluded to the challenges of working with 45 women
in one circle such that the group would divide into two smaller circles on occasion.

Talking Sticks and Broomsticks


The talking stick is an artefact used in some Native American cultures to maintain order
in a counsel where consensus was the rule. The stick was passed hand-to-hand around the
circle and acted as the arbiter of the discussion. By passing the talking stick to each
member of the circle, each member is equally respected, their contributions valued and
should they decide to pass the talking stick without speaking, they have still participated
actively in the circle dynamics. Since each person must hold and pass the talking stick, it
is through this sacred, yet inanimate artefact that the circle becomes a fully
interdependent, interconnected and inclusive social formation.
On the advice of the webcrones, I had acquired a talking stick for the CCVII focus
groups, Talking Woman, a short stick topped by a grey haired Crones head fashioned
from papier mach, by one of the webcrones specifically for the workshops. Her presence
delighted the participants and I was accepted as one of them. One woman immediately
shared a story about the childrens brooms used as talking sticks at CCVI. As the oldest
Crone in her Wisdom Circle, she was awarded the broom at the end of Counsel. Since she
also needed a cane for support, she had difficulty packing the broom into the overhead

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compartment on her plane trip home. She asked a man in the next seat if he would help
her. Whereupon, he replied with a twinkle in his eye, Of course, Ill be happy to help
you, but I dont see why you bothered taking a plane. Being a Crone, she was delighted
with the exchange. The inference that she could fly home on her witchs broomstick
brought forth peals of laughter. Although tongue-in-cheek, the story reflects the blend of
whimsy and mysticism that is the spice of Crone communities and interactions borne out
by the following description:
And that kind of mystery that gets transferred about who we are is one of the
things that I love above Crone. You cant explain what we do or who we are.
You have to feel it and experience it, and then you live it automatically (CCVII
focus group one).

Drumming Rituals
Crone Thunder is a drumming group affiliated with the Crone of Puget Sound. I believe
that the groups name provides a clue to the prevalence of Crone drumming groups and
drumming rituals. Drumming makes a goodly noise and is a way for Crone-identified
women to bond with each other, such that one woman identified the intimacy involved
in her drumming circle and the connection that builds between them as reasons why
she drums (CCVII group three). So, drumming is also a ritual practice that energizes
Crone activities and gatherings. For example, one woman described being Mother
drummed for two hours [then] crowned as a crone at a Crone Counsel (CCVII
group one). Drumming is apparently a source of empowerment as it connects the women
with natural elements and events. For example, one woman described drumming the sun
down and drumming the moon up at outdoor gatherings of her Crone circle (CCVII

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group three). This description resonated with me because I had observed this practice at
a goddess ritual marking the summer solstice. Each woman was asked to bring a
percussion instrument with her or take one from the large basket provided at the
gathering in a country home. At the appropriate time, just as the sun was setting, we all
took hold of our instruments and snaked out in a long line in the farmers field behind the
house. We beat, whacked, rattled and pounded our instruments until the sun was only a
rosy glow in the sky. At that point, we drew together in a circle and the rituals of the
Spiral Dance began in the light of the moon.
We were apparently celebrating a natural event by meshing our human sounds
and rhythms with the rhythms of natural forces. Thus, one woman explained the practice
of drumming as touch[ing] a real primal part of us tracing the history of drumming
through Native American traditions with male drummers back to Celtic times, when the
women drummed And so drumming became really important in their rituals (CCVII
group three). She went on to explain the different sorts of drums that her group used and
then she described the process followed by her drumming circle, a group of 30 women
who meet monthly in the earth ship which is a large building made of spare tires that a
crone, who is here at Crones Counsel owns (CCVII group three).
we might drum for about 15 minutes and it sort of winds down by itself. Theres
no clock. And when it ends (we call that a round), and so in our two hours we
might end up doing several rounds. And what we started doing is putting
intention to the rounds. So someone might have somebody thats sick thats
close to them and we say, okay, this will be a healing round. Or this next round
is for mother earth . We light candles. We have an altar where people put

their sacred objects. They throw out names into the circle. Someone who
theyve lost. Its a wonderful way I think to help the grieving process.
(CCVII group three).

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She described the challenges of having women from all over the world come to
their drumming circle, since it changes the energy and diminishes the intimacy of the
group. After sitting on it for a time, the group decided to maintain an open circle
because the women who were coming were walking away with so much. They were
going to all parts of the world and doing the work that we said that we wanted to do
(CCVII group three). A woman in focus group one recounted a similar story, one of her
favourite stories:
in San Diego, there were a group of German tourists, and we had a great huge
bonfire the very first night on the beach, and we threw all the things we wanted
to get rid of into the bonfire and burned them up. And this woman was there
with her drums and everybody else had drums and so we started a big ring going
around this fire pit. Dancing and dancing and dancing and whooping it up and
hollering and everything. And I couldnt get down in there because of my cane,
so I happened to be back and I heard one of the German visitors say to another
Im going to get my camera. He said I want to show the women in Germany
what American women are like. And I thought oh how Id love to be a fly on
the wall during that conversation (CCVII group one).

These descriptions exemplify not only the power of ritual drumming but also the way that
Crone culture is distilled beyond Crone communities.

Naming and Claiming


The naming of self and the claiming of female lineage are empowering practices and
rituals of empowerment. These practices go beyond respecting any single woman, since
the substance of the rituals conveys status and moral authority to women as a group. At
the same time, individual women who now participate in the construction of meaning by
proclaiming their name and female lineage become self-defining in the process, a further
source of empowerment.

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Naming the Self


The practice of taking a spirit or Crone name as a rite of passage is prevalent in Crone
culture. For example, one woman described a ritual drumming round for the many
women [who] are changing their names and so every month, well have a naming round
(CCVII group three). When a woman changes her name, she will announce her new
name to the drumming circle, saying I am now Crone name. Then the circle drums a
whole round chanting the Crone name over and over and over (CCVII group three).
Likewise, on webcrones, Treecrone describes her naming ceremony, which was
accompanied by a poetry reading in honour of the occasion. I also changed my last
name to Treecrone in honour of myself as a crone, and in honour of the trees which I love
and honour. Trees pride in naming herself is apparent in her affirmation that the taking
of the name has symbolic meaning for her; signals her transition to Crone; and is an event
steeped in honour. Yet, another webcrone explains the significance of choosing her
Crone name:
I loved the quote from Anais Nin: and the day came when the risk to remain
tight in the bud was more painful than the risk it took to blossom. At first, I was
Rosebud Blossoming, then I had an online Croning ceremony, so you see, the
wise women of webcrones have set me along a path and I am coming into my
fullness. I chose the name RoseCrone Blooming as part of the ceremony and I
took the name of the rose because it is a very special flower of great beauty and
fullness and I felt that it was my aim to be a beautiful person (inner person, that
is) just like the beautiful rose of nature. (webcrones posting).

This story exemplifies the evolution or metamorphosis experienced by Crones in Crone


communities, marked by rites of passage and symbolic gestures.

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A Naming Counterstory
Many webcrones women have described similar ceremonies of self-naming, highly
ritualized events, or more personal affirmations and on occasion, a legal name change. It
seems that the ritual of naming extends beyond the actual ceremony to the telling of
stories about the naming of self. Recounting the story of choosing and changing names
qualifies as a counterstory because the chosen community provides critical insight and
moral authority that both sanctifies and supports the process of self-definition. The
naming story below reflects this process of an evolving identity as an aspect of coming to
great age:
As some of you know, I have difficulty seeing myself as a Crone yet. So my
chosen name isnt a Crone name for me, but one, which indicates where I am on
my path. I had in fact decided not to choose a name since it didnt feel right, and
then one day for no specific reason the name Changing Woman came into my
mind. Changing Woman: a wise woman and guide among the Navajoa name
with spiritual significance. I dont consider myself a wisewoman, (sic) though
considering that Ive lived a long time, I can certainly be a guide for some people
from time to time.

Here the teller tells the story of choosing a Crone name, exchanging her story with other
webcrones who have told their naming stories. However, this is also a counterstory that
allows for reflection on the process and meaning of the path she finds herself on, which is
the path of aging. She tells the story not only for herself, but also for the community of
Crones who hear her, reflect on her story and respond to it.
So she continues:
And I was most reluctant to use a name, which has spiritual significance for a
people whose spiritual traditions, I dont share. It seemed arrogant and
presumptuous. I mentioned my hesitation in this group and found the responses
helped me to clarify both my reasons for wanting the name, and my hesitation to
use it. Increasingly, the name seems right to me, for my reasons: I am, always, a
Changing Woman; I hope and try to change the world in which I live so as

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to make it a more just and compassionate place for us all. I try to do this with a
mind and heart open to spiritual direction. So, perhaps I am not too far removed
from the original Changing Woman, though she had goddess-like powers, I do
not possess. I use the name rarely only when I feel that what Im saying is in
keeping with the spirit of the name (webcrones posting).

In recognizing that the name is right for her for her own reasons, this woman moves
slowly and critically down a path that empowers her to moral self-definition and the
recognition of her wisdom and spiritual capacities.

Claiming a Womens Lineage


As the storytelling got underway in the first morning program at Crones Counsel VII, I
was astonished to hear the first speaker begin with her maternal lineage, I am Nadia,
mother of Geneva, daughter of Partha, granddaughter of Ella, great-granddaughter of
Geneva and so it went for every speaker42 . So I asked the participants of the focus
groups to reflect on the meaning of this ritual or practice. One women described how
empowering it was to place yourself in a line with other strong women (CCVII focus
group one) while another described her personal experience:
At my first womens retreat weekend I learned to say: I am Joan, daughter of
Nancy, granddaughter of Elizabeth and Karen, great-granddaughter of Matilda.43
And it just touched my heart and my soul. I never new my grandmothers and I
never thought about them because my folks never talked about their mothers
much. But that night around the campfire drumming, and I connected with my
grandmothers. And theyve stayed with me ever since . Its like when I look at
my veins, theyre part of me. Theyre part of my makeup. Its like I can see their
blood running along with mine through my veins. And its just a wonderful,
wonderful feeling (CCVII group one).

42

In order to maintain the anonymity of participants in this study, I have avoided the use of names entirely.
However, in this case, omitting names detracted from the description, therefore, I have used pseudonyms to
more closely reflect the process of the ritual in this and one other similar description below.

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One of the women exclaimed: Its good that you brought those women to our group
(CCVII focus group one). This response provides much insight into the ritual. It seems as
if in saying the names of female ancestors along with their children, the women are
placing themselves within a line of women and asserting the significance of womens
lives. This assertion goes beyond the act of birthing the human species to other qualities
that women own, which are perceived as significant to the extending of the human
species: endurance, strength, nurturing, and wisdom. The experience of locating women
in a cultural frame extending over many generations is a powerful one as one womans
experience attests. She recalled the ritual of telling the lineage at Crones Counsel VI,
where it was repeated each time a woman spoke in a group setting:
I love it. I love it. Its honouring women. Its honouring women and I
think we need to honour women (Ibid.).

Croning Rituals
The passage from midlife to later life, from mother to Crone is often observed formally
with a Croning ceremony or ritual. These rituals vary in form and are celebrated by
individual women with selected friends or family and by organized groups, for example,
the Crone of Puget Sound and the Amazing Greys. In Crone lore, a common definition
for the word Crone is crown, so not surprisingly, crowning is often a feature of the
Croning ceremony. A woman describes other features:
the way we would do any ceremony, the solstice, the equinox, special occasions
by calling in the directions, so thats always setting the scared circle. We had
music. We had flowers. There was a give away and I think candles. We each
made our own [crown] out of flowers fresh flowers with ribbons and
everything and then what we did is we crowned each other, and we said a few

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words If I can remember what the words were I would put your crown on
your head and I think I said Go forth now and shine our light (CCVII group
three).

The encouragement to shine our light reflects the communal nature of the ritual and the
symbolism. An invitation to a Croning ceremony conducted by the Crone of Puget
Sound for members who have never been Croned promised the inspiring words of
sister Crones inviting you to grow old with a lively sense of the wisdom and power of
Crone Woman [editors emphasis] (Crone Connection, May 2002:17).
The meaning of the Croning ceremony for this group is the recognition of
positive aging (Ibid.). A posting to webcrones by a Crone member describes this
sociable ceremony:
I have found it interesting that many women I meet are anxious to become
Crones when they see how much fun we are having. Our group (consisting of
women of all ages) has a Crone ceremony once a year for all the women who
have requested to be honored during that year. We have an altar where photos
chosen by the women, of themselves, are placed. We make flower garlands to
crown them with. Gifts are given to each of them by the women in attendance
and they give gifts to each other. The gifts are heartfelt, personal, and bring a
message with them. We sing and dance and drum to celebrate them. They are
asked to tell a story about themselves. There are other wonderful spontaneous
things that happen. The celebration is brought to a close after a great potluck is
served (webcrones posting).

For women, who find it difficult to recognize their unique and special qualities, the
Croning ceremony provides recognition and honour at the same time as it empowers
them to assume the status, roles and title of Crone.

A Croning Counterstory
The following dialogue in Crones Counsel focus group three about Croning celebrations
and rituals exemplifies the process through which women come together, share their

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experiences, and derive insights into their own experience. This is a collaborative
process of critical reflection through which they gain a sense of authority and
empowerment that allows them to make choices about their future and through which
they are able to empower each other and other women. The dialogue begins with one
woman recounting the story of her Croning:
I had my Croning ceremony when I was 51. I personally felt that when I turned
50 and I felt that transition that I wanted to celebrate that passage with a Croning
Ceremony. and we encourage the Crones to have a Croning ceremony, some
sort of passage. Its the most empowering thing you can do for yourself and most
of us, if not all of us, didnt get to do the passage work when we became
adolescent, when we started menstruating. And wouldnt it have been wonderful
if we could have done that?

To which a second woman responded: Just the opposite. It wasnt anything to celebrate.
It was something to hide and be ashamed of . A third woman chimed in:
Thats right and then when you become a mother. Again, the same thing, youre
caught up in the birth of this child. And you might christen the child, but who
does the passage work for the mother, who has now become a mother?

The second women again responded: Ive never thought of that, but youre so right.
There is no passage work there either. The third woman agreed: Thats really
important and then the second woman said: Or if you lose a child. To which the first
woman replied: Yes. Absolutely! Yes. So I think the Croning ceremony is important.
Then a fourth woman who had been listening intently exclaimed:
Just what you said made me think about it right now. Im definitely going to have
a Croning ceremony. Theres no Crone circle, but I think Ill invite all the
special women in my life to come to my Croning ceremony.

Another woman said, Yes. And your family. To which the woman responded:
Yes. Ill invite my daughters. Absolutely! Im not inviting my husband, just the women

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in my life. A response came from a woman who had invited her husband to her
Croning to do the videotaping:
Yes. Just the women and what I think was the most important thing about my
Croning ceremony was the declaration. And every woman does her declaration in
her own way. So, for instance, one of the women who liked to write poetry and
sing, she sang her declaration. She wrote a song and it was called I Fly Like An
Eagle. Then she sang I am a Crone. And it was really beautiful and that takes
a lot of courage in front of a lot of people, singing solo in my declaration, I
paid tribute to my son and my husband who was there to support me through the
menopausal process, which was really difficult for me. And I claimed my place
as Crone. And with that comes responsibility to the community.

This discussion locates Crone morphing against the absent rituals of that might mark the
significant passages of womens lives. The very meaning of the term passage work
was informed by the mention of the deeply emotional, embodied experiences that these
women had experienced the menarche, childbirth, miscarriage and stillbirth, menopause.
Here was recognition of the absence of rituals to mark those significant passages as well
as the intention to now address this neglect with declarations and celebrations.

Honouring the Storyteller


The morning sessions of Crones Counsel VII began with seven or eight stories told by
individual women of about 5-7 minutes in duration. Likewise, the process of Wisdom
Circles and many of the workshops begins and ends with storytelling. While the theme of
the Counsel was Honouring the Storyteller, it seemed to me that the telling of stories
extends well beyond this particular gathering as a ritual practice of Crone culture and
communities. What differentiates a Crone from other older women is her willingness to
tell the truth about her life (Crones Today, Crones Counsel website). I found that at
Crones Counsel VII, the morning ritual of storytelling, the wisdom circles and the

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workshops provided the space for Crone-identified women to speak their truth and
beyond that, to discover their truth in the living histories of other women. The essence of
the theme, Honouring the Storyteller and the rituals and practices of storytelling was to
inspire the women not only to speak their truth, but also to make sense of it; to become
critically conscious regarding their lived experience and to move forward from there on a
self-directed path. In order to form conclusions, I have drawn on the discussions in the
Crone Counsel focus groups initiated with the question: What is the meaning of
storytelling for you?
Insights of a first-time participant at the Counsel resonate with my own
observations:
This morning was my first time to see that, and although we tell stories in our
Crone circle in San Diego, we dont do it with the ritual and the large group and
the acceptance and the humour. I like the gong. You know. I mean and I
thought it was terribly powerful and terribly intimate (CCVII group two).

It seemed that storytelling steeped in ritual told in sacred space is a process that
encourages the women to speak their truth. By its nature, the sacred space of Crones
Counsel encompasses the values of confidentiality, and acceptance. The provisional
guarantee of confidentiality, anonymity, and security encourages self-disclosure:
I consider it sacred space, so I dont tell any of the stories. But sometimes I tell
what I felt or what I learned. You know, somebody told a story at Crone Counsel
and what I learned or what I felt or what I discovered about me, I share that. But
I never tell the stories. I sometimes journal some of them for me (CCVII group
two).

The general acceptance of a womans story without the norms of judgment or rescue is
also an encouragement to speak ones truth, as is the unconditional positive regard with
which Crone stories are heard:

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Theres a general acceptance. No matter what the story is, everybody accepts the
person. Theres no judgments . nobody is here to fix anybody. And thats
another reason you go home fulfilled. Nobody tried to fix you. Theres always
the big hugs. Theres the tears. We share our emotions. You see a lot of
emotions going on and I dont know of a group Ive ever been in where even
with your best friends you hold back your emotions. Here you get up, you tell
your story, you get emotional; they get emotional with you. But its a healthy
emotional, and everybody told you, you were great and towards the end well
even sing songs acknowledging our beauty. And I dont know, Ive never felt
my beauty acknowledged in that way. So with me its just the whole intimate
experience (CCVII group two).

Speaking ones truth through storytelling is thus, an emotion-laden, empowering


experience. It is a way of sharing the wisdom gleaned through lived experience that
encourages self-reflection and the reinterpretation of ones own living history through a
collaborative or symbiotic process:
You really hit a place in me with that question, and I want to acknowledge that
for myself. Um, I just never thought about it quite in those terms and Im an
unmothered crone. Um, and I think the stories I hear create a mothering, an
intimacy, an understanding about women that I was never, I was my mothers
mother as far as the relationship and um, my extended family is very tiny. I
never just spontaneously intimately heard who they were, and so I can hear my
ancestors stories in these stories. I can hear my own story in these stories, parts
of my story that maybe Ive never told myself or never had the words for. Its
the most intimate experience Ive ever had in my life and Im pretty good at
intimacy because it goes to a place that had never been for me before (CCVII
group two).

In this reflection, the woman identifies the process of connection between the storyteller
speaking her truth and the woman hearing the story as well as her own truth within it.
In focus group three, this discussion was elaborated more fully. Storytelling
opens your heart, said one woman, the tears flow everywhere. somebody who is
just telling a story about something and all of a sudden the person sitting next to you will
burst into tears. It touches us (CCVII group three). For this women, opening the
heart means being open to emotion or expression of emotion and taking down that

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barrier (Ibid.). The expression of emotion is both a spiritual experience and a way to
get rid of pain (CCVII group three):
the person who tells the story then is open emotionally and reaches deep to tell
her truth and be authentic, and then the person who receives [it] and say that
story particularly touches her, then it touches her in an emotional way, and she
perhaps again or maybe for the first time, hears a truth, her truth (CCVII group
three).

This same woman explains that opening the heart and getting in touch with the
emotions is a way to reach truth and this is the notion of reflecting on personal
experience, dealing with pain, and then identifying a more authentic or self-defined life
path. The storytelling process allows the hearers to confront their experience by helping
it come up, whatever it is and deal with the unresolved emotions around the
experience (CCVII group three). Thus, by stirring anger or sorrow or some emotion, just
the process of getting it up and out will help get rid of it. Bringing it right there in front of
you (CCVII group three).
Ultimately, this process provides women with a sense of self-worth gained in the
knowledge that their lives and experiences while unique in the details were not
exceptional in the emotional costs and the available responses. As one woman tells it,
Im still learning and Im still growing and Im finding that listening to the
stories and participating in the wisdom circles and sharing our stories that were
all very different but yet were all very much alike. And weve been through a lot
of the same struggles and ups and downs (CCVII group one).

Another woman is even more explicit:


One of the things listening to the stories does for me is it helps me to retrace
some of the steps that Ive been on and to find they werent that unusual, that
other people have walked the same path that I have. And sometimes I am
reminded of things that I thought I had totally forgotten, and I realize theres still
some unfinished work to do around that. And sometimes I listen in awe and
wonder how in the world people have found the courage to keep moving. But

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always, there is such affection sent out from the audience to the person talking
that its a very easy group to talk to because whatever you say is being held in
loving, loving hands (CCVII group one).

The meaning of stories becomes all the more clear when meshed with an understanding
of the sense of communion or community these women apparently derive through their
Crone connections. One women described how for the first time in my life I recognized
my tribe, I recognized my people, Id never felt like I fit anywhere, but I fit with the
Crones. Another woman described Crones Counsel as finding my family, my group,
my gang. Two participants in separate workshops used similar words, for Crone
community, its like being at the right place at the right time and for Crones Counsel
its the right place. Many of these women along with the women of webcrones
characterized themselves as non-conformists. As one woman of webcrones puts it
eloquently:
In the ensuing years, I remained uniquely myself, but I always felt inwardly
different that my years on this wheel's turning allowed that I was. I was never
dancing to the same drum as the majority of my female peer group.

They were never joiners, nor did they ever feel comfortably connected. Given the
abjection and isolation of women of age, it seems to follow that at this point in their lives,
they recognize that aging is not a journey to be made solo and they seek out kindred
spirits in the Crone community for a support network.

Webcrones Stories
Since I have relied for the most part on postings from the webcrones cyberspace
community to evolve the theory of Crone morphing, I want to describe the context and
process through which these postings emerge. The themes that informed Crones Counsel

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VII, Honouring the Storyteller and the telling of stories resonate with the substance and
practice of webcrones. While the community was founded as a participatory action
research project to describe and make sense of Crone morphing, the purposes of such a
project are fully congruent with the values and interests of any Crone community. I also
note that many of the webcrones are also members of other Crone communities in actual
space, so threads of the story must be seen to emerge from those communities as well. In
fact, I contend that all of the stories recounted in Crone communities when taken together
constitute a community counterstory derived for the purpose of transforming not only
individual community members but also the dominant reality in communities of place.
Over the life of the webcrones cyberspace community, there have been many,
many stories spun out and woven together in a dialogic process. The gist of the stories
has varied from spirituality to relationships, from senior moments to mourning, from
rituals to visualizations, from sports to disability, from greywater to cooking, from
bonding and joy to separation, loss and grieving. There have been many, many
introductions. Whenever a person has joined the community, the old hands open their
hearts and tell the details of their lives, their geography, their biographies, how they came
by their Crone or spirit names, the topography of their lives aspirations, occupations,
adaptations, friends, lovers, husbands, children, and pets. Webcrones women are poets,
essayists, journalists, musicians and artists. They are Rolling Crones and Raging
Grannies, grad students and farmers, ministers wives and ministers with husbands. So
many original and wonderful poems and stories have been posted to webcrones, an entire

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anthology of Crone poetry, an ecocrones guidebook, a Raging Grannies sourcebook, a


veritable handbook on ritual, an arthritics cookbook and a geriatrics encyclopedia.
One recent posting epitomizes the freedom and humour with which we introduce
topics on webcrones. This was an essay on the migration of a pubic hair to the authors
lip!! Granted that was a light-hearted offering, but it gave rise to a vigorous exchange
about the state of our aging bodies and provided much validation for the author, who is
looking to publish her work. Another webcrone writes a long posting about her anger
and distress with her marital situation concluding with an apology So thats a little
report on how things are going. I do hope that all of you webcrones, do not feel burdened
by my sad story (webcrones posting). Among the responses to her posting, one seems to
capture the sense of connection and care in the community:
I consider it an honour that you choose to share this challenge here. I
'Imagine" you...standing with a whole bunch of us in a semi-circle behind you ...
that is "saying" ..."We've got your back"... and ..."It's ok to lean back on us when
you need to there is much strength and caring here, for you to draw from ...
anytime you wish ..." [ellipses in the original] (webcrones posting).

Not every story recounted on webcrones is a counterstory. However, every story,


whether sociable, supportive, empathetic or instructive, contributes to the connections
that join the members together in a Crone community. This in spite of the fact that more
than one community member eschews a Crone identity. However, it should be
emphasized that while they reject the Crone identity for self, they respect it as an ideal
type or for others who they judge to more closely fit the Crone mold. This is evident in
the posting on giving back the crown, where the storyteller reflects that there are so
many other beautiful heads that can wear that crown more comfortably than I can

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(webcrones posting). This is the crux of the community counterstory, a story told about
old women, that contributes to both the moral self-definition of the teller and the entire
community of Crones by undermining the dominant discourse that frames and constrains
womens lives.

THE COMMUNITY COUNTERSTORY:


LOVING THE CRONE BODY
In the introduction to this thesis, I contended that for women who identify themselves as
Crone, a term infused with extremely negative connotations of the aging female body, the
body is the departure for a process of revaluing and revisioning their lived experience, a
sort of phenomenology of Croning44 (McCabe, 2004:39). From that perspective, the
morphing of Crones can be understood as a transformative process that resists purely
essentialist or constructionist accounts of the female body by meshing the social,
psychological and corporeal dimensions of lived experience. It is a process for redefining
dominant culture to encompass new definitions of what it means to be fully human and
for staking a claim to being fully human. The question turns to how such a process of
transformation might be accomplished?
For the answer, I draw on the counterstories of the Crone body and the conscious
aging activism that evolves in Crone communities and particularly, the webcrones
44

Here, I define phenomenology as a philosophical and sociological approach to human experience, which
examines phenomena relying on the immediate perceptions of the social actor as the ground for making
sense of experience with little regard for the epistemological preconceptions of positivism or
constructivism (The Encyclopedia of Sociology, Duskin Publishing, 1974, 210; The American Heritage
Dictionary, 3rd Edition, Version 3.5, 1994).

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cyberspace community. Counterstories of the Crone body concern bodily integrity,


sexuality, and reproduction as well as the human need to be loved and valued for what we
perceive as our sacred selves. These are stories that reflect and reject the discourses of
dominant culture that denigrate female intelligence and the female body. They also reject
the heterosexual bias of dominant culture and the polarization of gender, accepting other
possible social and sexual arrangements. So at Crones Counsel VII, one woman remarks
on sexual difference in a Crone context:
Its the first place Ive ever been in where straight women and lesbian women
seem to get on without the tensions that often are in that space. And Ive been in
that space a lot. And theres usually political tensions and all sorts of other
tensions. So I think thats one of the most exciting things at this Crone Counsel
that I never would have known if I hadnt come was to see the sort of total
acceptance of women (CCVII group two).

Another woman agreed: Yes. And they really sort of meld in. You know, you dont
know who is lesbian and who is not unless they tell you. And it doesnt matter. Its not
something that [makes a difference] (CCVII group two). The meaning of it doesnt
matter in this comment refers to the non-judgmental acceptance of women at Crones
Counsel. This is a remarkable transformation for women, growing up in the 1930s and
40s, many of them in small town America, where access to information about sexuality
was limited:
The word "gay or lesbian" was never heard in my home. Ever. Nor anywhere
else in my small mid-west, ultra-conservative, super religious small town. I do
remember some whispering about the two strange ladies down the street who
lived there alone, and I was told to stay away from there, but not a thing about
why. I know if you wore yellow or green on a Thursday, you'd get teased about
being queer, but I really didn't know what queer was except that it was
apparently a bad thing to be!
By the time I did know what it all meant, I'd been programmed very well
to think of it as something worse than having a raging case of leprosy! When I

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discovered my striking lack of enthusiasm for heterosexual encounters, I simply


assumed and believed for many years that I was asexual, period. Parts missing.
Live with it. So, for me anyway, I didn't see it as a viable option at all. At 41,
when I finally did sober up long enough to discover myself....wellflat out
astonishment is the only way I can describe my reaction! :) (webcrones posting).

As this posting indicates, the experience, sharing and acceptance of individual


difference have also defined the webcrones cyberspace community. As one Crone,
ostensibly a straight woman put it: To each her own. It is just another part of this big,
diverse world we live on. (webcrones posting). Human diversity contextualizes much of
the substance of webcrones postings and is the source of vigorous discussion and debate.
A prerequisite of conscious aging is an engaged and passionate dialogue with other
Crone-identified women for what we can learn from each other and for the wisdom we
can gather together through our interactions. Over the five years of the communitys
existence, multiple dimensions of coming out have been discussed, defined and debated.
In one round, a member of long-standing, a lesbian pointed out women have come out
in this Crone circle in many ways (webcrones posting). Much later, the same woman
posts with tongue-in-cheek: since many of the group members seem to be coming out
in one way or another, I admit to being a recovering psychotherapist. The 12-step
programs have many applications. LOL [laugh-out-loud] (webcrones posting). Beyond
the humour of her comments, there is a deeper meaning that she hopes to intro-duce in
the discussion. Her comment begs the question, what does the act of coming out signify
to the webcrones women and how does it inform the community counterstory?

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Coming Out Counterstories and Conscious Aging Activism


Indeed, the webcrones women have come out in all their diversity as Crone, lesbian, prochoice, anti-choice, goddess, childless, recovering addict, incest survivor, atheist, beaten,
abandoned, fundamentalist in stories that describe their lived experience. These then are
the experiences that have informed the discussions, so in some sense coming out is a
defining practice and a value of the webcrones community. The Crone poem, Sticking
Your Neck Out, provides some insight as to the significance of coming out to webcrones.
The poet honours the women who [came out] as lesbians at 60 or 70 or more
(webcrones posting). So, coming out as lesbian can be seen as sticking your neck out,
taking a risk, an act of insubordination that goes against the grain of dominant culture.
By its nature, coming out as lesbian is a political act, but it must not be reduced to a
political act alone.
Coming out as lesbian in the webcrones community has been an act of loving
women, loving womens bodies, loving the self, and sharing the wisdom and joy derived
from loving and intimate relationships with a woman. For example, this posting begins
with regrets that the writer has been away and has missed a discussion on the meaning of
such terms as gay, lesbian, girl, woman, lady, and so on. This is too bad because she
has a different perspective to add to the discussion.
my partner and I do not consider ourselves lesbians at all, we just love each
other ... Further, just to stir the pot, not only are we still doing it but for some
of us it keeps getting better and better. My partner never even had an orgasm
with her ex-husband of many years. She constantly has orgasms now and this
seems to be more about mutual loving acceptance on the deepest levels rather
than technique. While I had a deeply satisfying sexual relationship with my exhusband of 34 years, I NEVER experienced real acceptance like I have with this
woman whom I loved since we met 24 years ago. In my experience, loving

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another woman does amazingly wonderful things towards loving and accepting
oneself as a woman. Just saying this makes me smile. I am not angry at my exhusband and I love with all my soul my two sons, but I see now how much work
I needed to do on loving ME (webcrones posting)

There have been many other postings to webcrones that substantiate this womans
experience of finding and loving her self through a lesbian relationship. It seems that
heterosexual relationships do now allow for the experience of self and it bears repeating
that the status of women in dominant culture has most often been defined on the basis of
their attachment their man, father, brother, husband as exemplified by the following
posting:
Heres how far we've come. My husband died in 1970 after a long illness. I'd
supported us and two kids by myself for the last five years of his life. After he
died, I could not get a credit card because I had no credit history. (However, I
WAS held responsible for 33,000.00 in medical bills he left!) The library refused
to issue me a card in my name. They insisted on knowing my husbands first
name, even though the man was dead! (Apparently dead men still had more
credibility than women back there where I was!) We'd had a Sears card for many
years, with me making the payments of course, all on time. They also refused to
put the card in my name, and closed our account once they were notified of his
death. Yeah. I no longer existed once he died, in many eyes! (webcrones
posting).

While this litany reflects the times, it also represents the context in which Croneidentified women have been defined as this response to a coming out message attests:
it seems to me that women have had to compromise their souls and self in order
to fit into a patriarchal society that expects us to fulfill the role of sex partner,
wife and mother. We must deny our love of each other, our talents and our
individuality, in order to fit the mould and to get children for ourselves. It seems
that yours is such an experience, but we all of us have much in common and I
feel so grateful that you have been able to come out of hiding after so many
years of denial. I wish you joy and serenity with your friend and lover
(webcrones posting).

This posting captures the sense of self-denial that has been experienced by some Croneidentified women engaged in stereotypical gender roles defined by dominant culture.

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Womens sexuality has often been subsumed as just another aspect of their gender role as
indicated above and in numerous reflections on webcrones:
I had four husbands, one for 40 years and the other three, short, for good reasons.
At this point I don't want anyone, man or woman living with me, because it
would be too easy for me to fall back into mother/wife responsibilities. Since I
have quit driving at night I wouldn't mind someone to do things with dinner,
concerts, etc, and even maybe sex but I am not sure about that need. I would like
them within walking distance. But with the energy of 84, and all the other things
I have set myself to do this is not a burning need in my life (webcrones posting).

In the webcrones community, coming out is a process of metamorphosis that inspires or


requires wisdom and courage. It is often a prelude to coming out in communities of place
as if trying on a new identity to get comfortable before going out in public.
For many of the webcrones women, the community provides a caring circle in
which they can speak of the pain, anger and grief suffered at the loss of self. And, they
are able to express their joy at the discovery of self and the outrageous act of defining
self:
I felt fully at home in the world yesterday: fully at home in my body and soul, at
last. And the world responded. There is a small part of me raging away at having
to wait till my life was so much behind me, to learn about who I truly am, and to
be able to accept it and live it. It is outshouted, however, by the rest of me that is
rejoicing that I have discovered me at all!! Will I ever know the joy of a full
partnership that matches who I am? Maybe I will someday. There is a little lady
a long ways from here with whom I've shared this coming out journey, via
written word and phone, for almost a year now. She is also discovering her own
femme identity, after a life of trying to be who she was not. I admire and love
her. Who knows? Maybe someday.
I am not at all sure why I am sharing all of this on a predominantly hetero
list, but there it is. I have long since stopped trying to figure out why I am here
with you all. I am because I am. Period! And, because I have gained SO much
from being here, in spite of any differences between us. Maybe this is how it
works; how bridges are built among women. And, maybe, this is a part of my
coming out, to my straight world friends (webcrones posting).

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Coming out is not so much a critique of males or masculinity as it is an act of defining


the self. It is a critique of the ideal construction of women as heterosexual and
monogamous beings that is fundamental to social relations in western capitalist
patriarchal culture, with its hierarchical dualist constructions of sex/gender that constrain,
polarize and homogenize individuals. In the hierarchy of compulsory heterosexuality,
women are subordinate and many of their parts, cognition, rationality, subjectivity and
bodily integrity are devalued. It is that schism of being that is at issue and might be
best addressed analytically through Lordes concept of the erotic, which defines the
social through fusion as opposed to schism.
In the posting above, the woman defines the webcrones cyberspace community as
a hetero community. She derives her definitions from the substance of the postings to
the community. In fact, Im not entirely sure of the statistical breakdown on sexuality.
What is emerging from the community is a more critical perspective on sex/gender.
As for crone age women "coming out" sexually as lesbians....we are sexual
beings. I mostly feel that it is near impossible to have a sense of healthy
sexuality given our culture. Perhaps I project my own woundedness, but I sense
that in this area we all feel hurt, confused, and frequently guilty. I don't
identify as heterosexual although I am married and have two children. I don't
identify as bi or homosexual either. I suppose I identify myself as a sexual being
- period. I have fallen in love with people of both sexes. I think I am talking
about androgeny. I'm interested in hearing from others.... (webcrones posting).

Her interest in hearing alternative viewpoints reflects the inquiring mind and the
open heart of a Crone. She accepts sexuality as an integral aspect of being human
without judgment regarding any particular orientation. Her attitude and interest
was also reflected at Crones Counsel:

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at other Crone Counsels we had someone who would speak to sexuality in one
form or another. And I used to take those workshops because its always been an
interest of mine. I guess if I was going to do a study, it would probably be on
sexuality. And we havent had that the past couple of times and I kind of miss
that because going through the different passages, the ageing, the widow, and
having a new friend, and I was wondering where I was going to take my
sexuality when it was all over with and sensuality. And I feel that I dont
know, Id like to know how other women feel about their sexuality and their
sensuality as they get older. Do they lose some of it? Do they replace it? But
that hasnt come up at all, and thats kind of an area I guess, like I say, Im very
interested in if I were going to do some studies (CCVII group two).

Choosing an Authentic Life


A significant aspect of telling Crone stories is the process of choosing an authentic life.
Authenticity requires a Crone to speak the truth about her life in order to resolve the
suppressed emotions, broken relationships, unfulfilled aspirations and buried hopes that
were the markers of life for them in dominant culture. Often a Crone will tell her story,
which is always met with encouragement and compassion, sometimes with critical
reflection. There is a slow process of working through the experience and then perhaps,
she may create a ritual that will sanctify the wisdom, which she has derived from the
process. The ritual is performed as a way of investing meaning and resolving past
experiences, the death of loved ones, old relationships and painful memories. The
following webcrones posting exemplifies this process for a childless woman:
We women are so fortunate to have each other. Can you imagine men having
issues to deal with, and no one to turn to? My husband and I are the same age,
but I have Pleiades and now, WEBCRONES; he has his hobbies! (Well, so do I,
and of course we have each other, but you know what I mean. Women have other
women.)
Now about rituals: I agree that if none exist we should create our own.
But ritual for me is not a private affair; it needs a supportive group, and, ideally
to my thinking, it should be a shared creation. One of the practical difficulties I
face in terms of ritual creation for childlessness is that I don't know any women
in my community who've had my experience. When an experience is deeply

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personal and deeply wounding, it should be exorcised, for me, in a shared


releasing. I don't know whether all women feel this way (of course not!
when have we ever known *all* women to have a common reaction, attitude and
need????) but I hope my meaning is clear (webcrones posting).

As the writer says, sharing the experience and the pain with other women whove shared
this experience resolves emotional pain. Sharing the experience with webcrones, a
consciously aging community invites critical reflection and unique interpretations of the
experience in the context of care and compassion. So, the writer shares her new
understanding at the end of her posting:
I realize as I write this that there's another way to phrase this thought: when
you've felt alienated from a group for some reason (in this case unwelcome
childlessness), the experience and the pain must be worked through with women
who've shared this experience. Only they know your truth (webcrones posting).

Although no one else had shared the experience of childlessness and some webcrones
women had chosen to be childless by design, nevertheless, this woman found webcrones
to be the empathetic, compassionate and caring community of women where she could
speak her truth.

From Conscious Aging to Conscious Aging Activism


A couple of years after she had shared her experience of childlessness with us, I sent her
a call for papers for a conference on Mothers without Children organized by the
Association for Research on Mothering (ARM). I thought this might be an opportunity
for her to speak her truth in a forum with other mothers who had experienced life without
children. This might be a ritual passage of sorts should she choose to participate. She
submitted an abstract and a few months later, at the age of 80, she took the train to
Toronto and made her presentation to an audience of about 50 women at the conference.

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Much later she wrote to me, backlist: I often think with pleasure and gratitude of
my opportunity to speak at the Conference at York a few years ago. It was a breakthrough for me in many ways to speak publicly about a very traumatic experience.
(webcrones backlist). Her presentation at ARM, a feminist scholarly association,
exemplifies the concept of conscious aging activism. In sharing her experience, and
speaking her truth, she has not only dealt with some of her pain, she has also come out as
a wise woman Crone. In her post, she went on to say that she has looked for other ways
to detoxify that memory. The idea that she is compelled to detoxify her memory
bears examination. It seemed to me that she had suffered a double wound, first and
foremost, a hysterectomy at age 18 which frustrated her desire to have children, and
second, the toxic effects of childlessness in a culture that defines mother and woman as
synonymous terms. Her suffering becomes all the more apparent in the construction of
the triple goddess as maiden, mother, crone, exemplifying the limits of man-made
language for defining women even in their resistance to dominant culture.

Coming Out Counterstories


Speaking the truth in a Crone community, telling counterstories, opens a space for
reflecting critically on the circumstances that have defined and shaped the lived
experience of Crone-identified women and for making sense of perceptions, beliefs,
behaviour patterns and emotions that adhere as a result. Therefore, I contend that
counterstories of the Crone body are revolutionary in their departure from dominant
culture and transformative in their potential to resolve the loss of self, experienced at the

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menarche.45 They empower individual Crone-identified women to reclaim and redefine


the meaning of their sacred self. As a community counterstory, they are transformative in
overwriting the dominant discourses of the female body, and defining new directions and
possibilities for Crone-identified women and those they seek to mentor. Coming out in
communities of place can be conceived of as a sort of conscious aging activism through
which a person becomes self-defining by their actions and the identity they project.
Coming out in dominant culture is transformative because it provides a template for
alternative forms of social relations, both at the micro level between individuals and
groups and at the macro level as a structural form.

45

For many women, the loss of self is experienced much earlier through the sexual abuse and incest that is
an enduring feature of dominant culture.

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6. MORPHING THE CRONE


Transforming the Self and the Social

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A Crone Manifesto
Peggy Cummings, Crone of Puget Sound, webcrones posting

The title "Crone" hasn't always been derogatory. In pre-Christian times, very old women
were particularly important members of communities. They were leaders, artists, healers,
midwives, and counsellors. They were seen as the fulfillment of female life experience and
wisdom. From the unrestrained youthfulness of the maiden, through the life-sustaining
importance of the mother to the calm, evolved and confident wisdom and compassion of the old
woman, lie in a lifetime of commitment to caring and listening and connecting. Without these
fierce and ancient commitments, human life could literally not have continued.
Those who choose the name of Crone do so deliberately, with full awareness of its
current negative connotations. It is chosen to confront the issues facing aging women and to raise
important questions about attitudes and feelings toward those issues. So, by bringing the term
"Crone" out of the shadows and into the light, the values can be revealed, strengths
acknowledged, with learning coming from the insights and experience honoured.
Old Women are discovering the strength that comes with knowing who they are. They
are freeing themselves from having to be something for someone else; freeing themselves to see
one another just the way they are, not through the filter of other's expectations. They are sharing
feelings, fears, and insights, accepting each other's changes and encouraging each other's growth.
In addition to these changes they are accepting that "old" is not a four-letter word; that "old" is
not a statement of a decline but one of time.
Old is not good or bad, it is just a measurement, without judgment. Crones are learning
to grow and grow old together. By using the name of Crone and accepting their ages they are
restoring the image of strong wise Old Women to their rightful place of honor and respect.

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MORPHING THE CRONE


This inquiry was informed by two research questions, What is the nature of Crone
metamorphosis? and How do Crone-identified women make sense of Crone
consciousness, culture and communities? In this chapter, I want to revisit those
questions, drawing on the conceptual framework derived through grounded theory
methodology to amplify my interpretations. In the concluding section, I discuss the
significance of the study for feminist praxis and sociological scholarship.

Crone Metamorphosis: From Abject Old Woman


to Powerful Crone
As to the nature of Crone metamorphosis, I have conceptualized it as the morphing of
Crones, a complex transformation in identity experienced by some women around and
about the menopause, from abject old woman to powerful Crone. The transformation of
identity encompasses social psychological, corporeal and cognitive dimensions. So, while
Crone-identification reflects a form of resistance to the pejorative constructions of old
women framed in dominant culture, it also represents a transformation in the individuals
sense of self, their personal relationships, their life aspirations and the decisions they
make regarding their life circumstances. These elements are reflected in the sensitizing
constructs of speaking the truth and living an authentic life. It is through affiliation with
a Crone community informed by Crone culture and structured by relations of
interdependence and an ethics of care that individual women are empowered to take a

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Crone identity and to live through it. This is an effect of coming to Crone consciousness
and conceiving of the self through a cultural group identity.
The theory of Crone morphing begins with the abject old woman, a conceptual
category that represents the diminishing status of women as they age and their cultural
devaluation in dominant hegemonic culture. Dominant culture has put forth many
pejorative terms that might be bundled into the concept of abject old woman, Crone for
one. Yet, the Crone Manifesto above charges women around and about the menopause to
take the Crone as a strategic identity, a deliberate act of confrontation (webcrones
posting). In consequence, many old women now represent themselves as Crones with the
goal of dispelling the negative stereotypes of dominant culture and transforming the
hierarchical social system that has oppressed them. Thus the Crone Manifesto is a
document that charts out directions for personal and political action with the goal of
social as well as individual transformation.
There are multiple dimensions to the abjection of old women, for example, the
diminished material circumstances of old women, the pathological constructions of the
post-menopausal body and the relative social invisibility of old women in cultural
representations. Since this thesis has focused in the main on culture and cultural
representation, I have elaborated the concept of social invisibility as opposed to other
aspects of abjection arguing that social invisibility is a precipitating factor in the
morphing process. However, it is not solely the social invisibility of old women that is at
issue. Social invisibility as the erasure of subjectivity is experienced by girls and women
across the lifespan, so I have conceptualized the morphing of Crones, as a response to

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present conditions in the old womans life in relation to the loss of sacred self
experienced by girls at the menarche. These two milestones in the life of a woman are
mirror images. At the menarche, girls are defined by their fertility and subsumed in the
cultural scripts for women in dominant culture. At the menopause, they are defined as
obsolescent and marginalized through pejorative characterizations that are the antithesis
of the ideal woman of hegemonic culture. The question turns to how old women with the
wisdom and experience of a lifetime will respond to the selfsame erasure of subjectivity
that they experienced at the menarche.
Many of the women in my study described this loss of self experienced as young
girls and women in a patriarchal capitalist culture. They never fit in; they never belonged.
They described coming out in their Crone years as an act of naming, claiming and loving
the self. Whether they came out as lesbians, scholars, artists, or athletes, they now define
themselves according to their own dictates. Yes, they extol and practice an ethics of care,
but with a difference. They have extended the notion of care to self-care transforming
self-sacrifice to an equitable caring for all. This means surrendering the control that
caring invests in the caregiver and accepting the ministrations of others for self and there
has been much discussion on webcrones on the challenges of making and living with that
decision.
The rediscovery of self through the conscious aging process in Crone
communities constitutes the social psychological dimensions of morphing the Crone. It
is an act of redemption, emancipating the long lost self from the grip of societal
expectations. Crone-identified women are now encouraged to resurrect long held

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aspirations and old hurts; to mourn and grieve for lost opportunities and to reach for their
dreams insofar as possible. That many women make a conscious or strategic decision to
identify as a powerful Crone is an effect of the imprint of radical feminist counterculture
and the attractions of cultural alternatives to abjection. That they might conceive of
themselves as Crones in the absence of a feminist politic is an effect of the corporeal
changes of menopause, the social psychological dimensions of living through the body
socially defined in a hierarchical, patriarchal culture and the presence of the Crone
symbolic in popular culture.
Regardless of their motivations, the conscious aging activism of Crone-identified
women now manifests the powerful Crone as a cultural icon, an ideal type and a role
model for girls and women in dominant culture with the potential for producing a hybrid
culture. Therefore, I have argued that they are well positioned to queer the binary
oppositions of dominant culture since the powerful Crone apparently transcends the
ideological space of hegemonic culture. Whether or how that sort of radical
transformation of the dominant social system can manifest itself in fact is a speculative
project, which I address in response to the second research question, How do Croneidentified women make sense of Crone consciousness, culture and communities?

Making Sense of Crone Culture, Consciousness


and Communities
As to how Crone-identified women make sense of Crone culture, consciousness and
communities, there is no definitive answer. Certainly, the founders of Crones Counsel
and many of the Crone-identified participants bring a feminist standpoint to Crone

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activities. They are the second wave radical feminists grown older proposing a
transformation in the hierarchical social system of dominant culture through an
interdependent empowerment model of social relations. Likewise, many of the webcrones
also espouse a feminist politic. In that regard, they come to The Crone Project already
conscious of the feminist critique of dominant culture. At the same time, many
webcrones are women who eschewed a feminist politic because it defined them as
powerless or oppressed or a ball-breaking bitch. They may have rejected the radical
feminist politic that discounted their experience, rejected their sons and lovers or claimed
a marginal sisterhood with them for political gains.
It is ironic then that these women find themselves engaged in a culture that is
overtly feminist at this juncture of their lives. For the most part, their affiliation with
Crone culture is not initially a critical engagement. These women may have connected
with Crone culture and communities as a function of their friendly networks. For
example, several of the women in the Crones Counsel focus groups were introduced to a
Crone collective on the invitation of a friend. They are the sisters, aunts, colleagues, and
girlfriends of Crone-identified, feminist women. They came along to a Crone gathering
looking for entertaining companionship or lively age-mates with whom to share the
challenges of aging. They may have little awareness of a feminist perspective. Likewise,
the webcrones women came to the community through word of mouth or the electronic
grapevine. Still others found webcrones, or some other cyberspace Crone community or
conscious aging website by surfing the net with the search string, old women. Through
their affiliations with a Crone community informed by Crone culture, they may come to

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critical consciousness and acquire a Crone standpoint. This has certainly been the case
for some members of webcrones. For others, the feminist politic may be seen as too
radical or too apolitical in the context of the political order of hegemonic culture. Many
of them lurk and leave or continue to participate in the community from the margins.
Ultimately, for old women and any woman, for that matter, engaging with Crone
culture, consciousness and community requires a critical leap from the dominant
hegemonic representations of the abject old woman to feminist representations of the
powerful Crone, from mainstream culture to a feminist culture. That some women are
making that leap is clear from the findings of my study. Nevertheless, there is little
evidence of an organized, radical social movement that seeks to bridge that gap in a
militant fashion. Nor are the plans and strategies of Crones highly organized to promote
counterculture movement. This goes, in part, to the general disarray of the feminist
counterculture movement on all but the most immediate issues, reproductive rights, for
example. While many women attribute this decline to the backlash against feminism
described by Susan Faludi (1992), others and I count myself among them, believe that
radical feminists simply got tired or retired having won some battles and left the war.
On this account, womens studies scholar and cultural historian, Jerry Rodnitzky
concurs, attributing the rise and fall of the feminist counterculture, to the failure of
feminists to maintain the zeitgeist of the movement, to bridge the generation gap
between old feminists and the young women who have bought into the great American
myth that they can have it all if they want it (Rodnitzky, 1999:187). Old feminists, he
suggests have become more settled in womens studies departments or other disciplines

221

and feminist issues and consciousness raising have become largely academic (Ibid.:187).
Since not every woman comes into a feminist classroom, the expectation that young
women will become conscious is mere lip service to counterculture movement without a
strategic plan to accomplish that goal. Yet, in their mission to mentor younger women
and to share their wisdom as Crone Elders, the seeds of renewal are apparent and their
use of computer information technology is expeditious. For example, one of the
webcrones described the efforts of her group to bridge the generations:
A year or so ago, I launched a thing I called Salon after Mme Recamier. I
tried to mix up some sparkling elders with the busy 50 year olds. We only
had two or three meetings, but they were extremely successful. At the last
meeting, every one was so excited. The 50 year olds were all set to bring
their teenaged daughters, and then we were planning to have the three
generations talk about being teenagers. But the upshot of it all was that
the busy fifty year olds could not spare the time for just friendships. So
while all of us agreed it was a lovely, exciting idea, we regretfully
decided that it couldn't go on. We had plans to come dressed in the most
outrageous costumes we could find. But we had to regretfully shut it down
(webcrones posting).

To which came the response


isn't blaming the 50-year-olds a bit like blaming your mother ... it's true they
are busy ... they are the sandwich generation ... . However, it may be that they
need the tweaking or insistence of 'old Crones' to get them going on the truly
important stuff ... getting past organized hockey and figure skating or putting
food on the table and a roof over their heads We need more salons!
(webcrones posting).

Likewise, there was much discussion of mentoring as a role for Crones both in
Crone Communities and in communities of place.
Maybe theres a possibility to have, its a four-day conference and you have two
days strictly for crones and then two days where the younger people could come
along. And that may be one way of, you know, like the mentoring session.
(CCVII group one).

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In their communities of place, mentoring the young constitutes both conscious aging and
conscious aging activism. So, a woman describes the mentorship that old Crones provide
for Cronettes, women at the menopause and for young girls at the menarche:
Very important. Mentoring the young ones. And thats a difficult one. Some
communities find that very easy and they just get right out there and then our
community has been a little bit difficult so what weve done about that has been
encouraged the Cronettes, if you will, maybe the 40 year olds, to form their own
perhaps menopause groups and then maybe perhaps start, and they have done this
by the way in Sedona, have passage rituals for the young, the 13 year olds, the
young girls that are coming into their menstruation. And were there if they need
us. I keep hearing this a lot in larger groups. For instance if we have a huge
ceremony that includes the entire community, and then maybe one of the younger
girls will come down and theyll say, youre our grandmothers and youre really
important to us and we really need you. And so then well get together in our
Crone circle and well say Well what are we doing to help them? And we need
to do more. So mentoring the young I guess. (CCVII group three)

That Crone culture is engaging with women who gave short shrift to feminism in
earlier days is evidence of a vital movement. It suggests that there is potential for future
growth and substantial change in the dominant social system through the conscious aging
and conscious aging activism of Crone-identified women. Since they are indeed, for the
most part, mothers, grandmothers and aunties, they have a broad social network for
propagating the beliefs and values of Crone culture and the interdependent empowerment
model of social relations.

Conscious Aging and Conscious Aging Activism


The following message posted to webcrones exemplifies the process of critical reflection
and consciousness raising that characterizes the concept of conscious aging in a Crone
community. At the same time, it captures the connection between social invisibility and
the actions of Crone-identified women and articulates the pressing issues for Crone

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conscious aging activism. I include only a brief excerpt from a lengthy, insightful
analysis that is the culmination of five years of dialogue with webcrones:
We've all experienced the invisibility of older women and the stereotypes
about us. Most of us in this group have challenged both of those and are largely
successful in living as dynamic, exciting, interesting - very visible (and audible)
older women That's all to the good, but what seems to me to be missing is a
recognized place for Elder Women in our society Is there a place or a way in
our society to incorporate Elders as Elders, not as terrific Old but Wow
people...I'm not suggesting we stop being dynamic and active; I'm by no means
suggesting that we go back to being the traditional Old Grannie who knew when
it was time to sit in the rocking chair and retire from active life. The Raging
Grannies will continue to rage, the Amazing Greys to amaze, the Grey Panthers
to pounce - and so we should. But there seems to be a missing link between the
active women we are (however we show this) and the wise women we also are.
I'm wondering if there is some way in our society where we can find a place as
true Elders? (webcrones posting)

This posting describes the morphing of identity from the social invisibility of the
traditional old Grannie, one version of the abject old woman to the outrageous, amazing,
pouncing dynamic activism of the Crone Elder. It identifies the relative success of
transforming the self and the difficulty of transforming the social and it grasps the
connection between the two, the missing link between Crones being active and Crones
being wise Elder. The missing link here reflects this webcrones discomfort with what
she perceives to be a break between the politics of a Crone feminist counterculture and
what counts for praxis to individual Crone-identified women. In that regard, her polemic
is like a caveat regards the contradictory purposes of Crone mission and Crone action.
In the Introduction to this thesis, I identified the ambiguity in the Crone mission
that encourages and supports the personal unfolding and passage of its members from
past outgrown roles and stereotypes into powerful, passionate and satisfying old
womanhood (Crone of Puget Sound). I suggested that while Crone culture grounds itself

224

in the second wave radical feminist counterculture that took as its motto the personal is
political, the Crone counterculture may serve a more hedonistic purpose redefining that
call to action as a self-interested justification for acting out rather than a politics of
cultural transformation, social justice and collective interests. While such a mission
might liberate some old women from stereotypical social expectations, it would seem to
do little to transform the social world or to address the effects of dominant culture on the
lives of girls and women across the lifespan.
Yet, the Crone Manifesto claims that through the accumulation of years, and a
lifetime of commitment to caring and listening and connecting, old women are like a
wellspring of wisdom that could ameliorate the complex problems that challenge the
society (The Crone Manifesto, webcrones posting). Implicit in the statement is that
Crone culture offers alternative forms of social organization and configurations of power
that would result in a more harmonious world. Likewise, I have argued that the powerful
Crone as a cultural icon, a strategic identity and an ideal type is well-positioned to queer
the heterosexual binary and hierarchical structures of western industrial capitalist
patriarchy through the conscious aging activism of Crone-identified women in their
communities of place. The Crone communities that I have studied provide a model for
these alternative forms of social organization. However, the potential for Crones to
renegotiate the structures of power in dominant culture must wrestle first with the
ambiguity and ambivalence of the Crone Manifesto. By that I mean that old Crones and
old feminists must also resist the seductions of dominant culture in order to transform the

225

structures of power that perpetuate it. So the webcrones polemic, articulates the
potential for conscious aging activism and revising the Crone manifesto:
Does an Elder place have to come from us? Must we create it and demand it?
Will it happen if we don't? And how would we go about creating such a space?
It's not part of our western culture. I see it as almost "sacred space" In fact, as
I write this a question looms: are we so busy doing and showing that the Old
have vigour and zest that we too have lost our way? Are we so proud of not
"living OLD" and indeed living YOUNG that we too are in danger of uprooting
ourselves, in this case, pulling up the deep tap root that ties us to our beginnings 60 or 70 or 80 years ago, because it hold us back. Those ads showing vigorous
old people on motorbikes or playing tennis or skiing are great. But are we losing
something else - a sense of time and with it a sense of timelessness: As Elders
isn't that what we have to share: a realization that Time was before us, is now and
will continue, that we see and experience things differently at different stages of
time (webcrones posting).

This exchange emphasizes the possibilities and problems with Crone morphing.
If the Crone is merely an old but wow version of the sexualized strong woman type
contained in the hegemonic space of dominant culture then the notion of the powerful
Crone is an illusion. Crone-identified women will have surrendered the struggle for the
sign. She will not fulfil her potential as the Wise Woman Crone, the Crone Elder, at the
leading edge of a rejuvenated counterculture movement or as Rodnitzky characterizes it,
a feminist phoenix rising out of its own ashes (1999:188).

SIGNIFICANCE OF THE STUDY


FOR SOCIOLOGY AND FEMINIST PRAXIS
This study adds significantly to the breadth of knowledge in Sociology of the Body,
Aging, Womens Studies, Culture and Power with implications for the lived experience
of girls and women as follows: a] substantively, on the topic of Crones, the embodied
experience of gender and aging; b] theoretically, on the complex process through which

226

identity evolves as a social psychological, corporeal and cognitive process informed by


culture and communities; c] theoretically and politically, in identifying the existence of
alternative models of power and social relations in communities and counterculture
formations embedded within dominant culture; d] politically and psychologically, in
identifying the empowering potential of developing social ritual for girls and women; e]
substantively, on the potential of cyberspace communities to facilitate social
empowerment in actual space; and f] methodologically, relative to research on the
internet.
This study also provides insights on some lingering myths and questions that are
significant for feminist praxis:
1. Ive heard that many women come out as lesbians at the menopause. Is it true and
if so whats happening?
2. Many girls lose their self-esteem at puberty. Why should that be so and how
could we counteract it?
3. Where did feminism go, who stole feminism and why do so many girls buy into
dominant culture?
Given that the research implements the paradigms of participatory action research and
feminist ethnography, there are outcomes in the social world as well. Of primary
importance, participants in the study have reported substantial change in their lived
experience as an outcome of the Crone collaborations on webcrones. Some of them have
come to critical consciousness about their situation as older women situated in an
industrial capitalist patriarchal hegemonic system. They have been inspired, nurtured and

227

empowered through the community of Crones to come out as themselves however they
define that action, to write and construct rituals for women, old and young, and to do
consciousness-raising with younger girls and women and to resolve the grief at the loss of
their sacred selves at the menarche.
Beyond those most significant outcomes, The Crone Project website along with
my lectures, focus groups, conference, and poster presentations like the work of other
Crone academics manifests an additional Crone presence in virtual and actual space that
promotes Crone consciousness and culture. In my own relationships with my children,
my partner, my extended family and communities, my students and friends, a new
personal and cultural identity has indeed been born and raised in the world. So at one
recent birthday, my children presented me with an original art card that depicted an older
woman seated in a clearing in the forest surrounded by an unexpected assortment of
creatures, a school of brightly colored fish. The campfire is sending forth its light at the
centre and the stars shine overhead. The colours are like jewels and there is a sense of
brightness, warmth and security that pervades the night scene. All attention is on the
woman who is speaking to the group, her arms stretched out as if to draw them all into
her story. I take it that this is the new world bathed in the wisdom of the Wise Woman
Crone. Inside the card my adult children had written a brief message, This card
reminds us of you, they wrote, the old Crone, telling her stories and sharing her
wisdom with all. Apparently, they too now conceive of the Crone, as a woman of age,
wisdom and power.

228

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238

Appendix I
METHODOLOGICAL PARTICULARS
The Crone Project Web Documents
?? Crone Project Outreach
?? Crone Links Page
Crone Website Addresses (URLS)

239

THE CRONE PROJECT OUTREACH


Calling All Crones!
Welcome cyber-traveller to this infinitesimal virtual space near the centre of the web
where minds converge to ponder the Crone. But first let me spin out my own story for you. I am
a student Crone. That is, I am a Crone student and a student of Crones. I am a PhD candidate in
Sociology at York University, Toronto, Canada. The topic of my research is the Crone: woman of
age, wisdom and power; woman of independent spirit. I am exploring what I call Crone
phenomena: crone networks, crone collectives, crone lifeworlds, crone stories, crone values,
crone social and political movements and Crones. At the top of my list is Crone consciousness
because it is the conscious choic e to live as a Crone that I believe is at the heart of the
phenomena.
I am hoping to engage a number of Crones to collaborate in my research. Collaboration
would involve subscribing to my listserve; engaging in the
dialogue that goes on there; filling out a survey that I will be eventually
mounting on my website and perhaps, providing a respectful interview about
their Crone way of life, which is not the way, of course, but a way.
I have three objectives for my research project:
First, there is no doubt that all Crones conceive of themselves as women of age, wisdom
and power and I think it is time that we, Crones, write our name in the history books, in this case,
it will be the social history books. I have chosen to do this project in academia so that Crone
wisdom will be acknowledged and integrated into the "legitimate domain of academic
knowledge.
Second, Crones can negotiate meaningful change in the social structure of this planet
through their wisdom, ethics, values and practices, but we need to publicize them to a wider
audience than ourselves alone.
Third, Crones can be role models for younger women. We must be more than mothers for
our daughters, if we want them to experience their fullest potential. We need to model our
creativity, spirituality, rationality, intuitiveness, wisdom, and emotion in order to define and
create a more holistic, positive framework for the lives not only of women but of all creatures on
this planet.
If you are a Crone or an incipient Crone, I hope you will join in the project and the
listserve. I look forward to hearing from you. Please do send your comments, your queries, your
critiques and your suggestions to me through e-mail at [email protected] or by snail mail to the
address below.

240

CRONE WEBSITES AND URLS

WEBSITE TITLE

URL

DATE
RETRIEVED

Almitas Online Gallery

www.vashonisland.com/almitasgallery/

5/07/1998

Birthing the Crone

www.birthingthecrone.com/

12/06/1998

A Cup of Wisdom

http://www.conniespittler.com/

2/07/2004

Crone

www.tanglewave.com/crone.html

18/12/2003

Crone Art Dolls

http://stubbornlights.org/gallery/crone

17/12/2003

Crone Ceremony

17/12/2003

Crone Chronicles

www.designsbywillow.com/site/20CroneCeremony.html
www.cronechronicles.com

Crone Chronicles

www.cronechronicles.com

24/5/2004

Crone Cottage

www.nwlink.com/~ffranke/contents.html

09/04/1998

Crones Counsel I

www.cronescounsel.net

24/06/2004

Crones Counsel II

www.fau.educ/womenstd/students/studentactivity.htm

25/05/2003

Crone Moon

www.spiralgoddess.com/CroneMoon.html

2/06/2004

Crones Nest

www.fortunecity.com/victorian/hurst/321/crone.html

16/04/1998

Crones Parlor of Witchcraft

http://secretcircle.nightworld.net/crones/

2/06/2004

Crone Poetry

www.pathcom.com/~timex/poems.htm

19/03/1999

Croneways

www.croneways.com/

15/04/2004

Crone~Wise Woman~Elder I

www.runningdeer.com/crone/crone.html

10/04/1998

Crone~Wise Woman~Elder II

www.cwwe.org/

2/06/2004

Crone~Wise Woman~Elder III

www.yoni.com/crone.shtml

22/05/2004

Croning Resources for Wise


Women of All Ages
Eco-Crones

www.croning.org/pages/534083/index.htm
http://www.eco-crones.org/pages/551970/index.htm

22/05/2004

Goddess Images~Crone Art at


Bell Pine Art Farm
Joanna Powell~Crone Art

www.bellpineartfarm.com/home/bp1/page/6/11

19/06/2003
10/04/1998

Maid~Mother~Crone

http://222.nas.com/jpcolbertart/PrintsPg/ArtPrints/Virg
inCrnCopy/hecate.html
http://member.aol.com/ATOYA/crone.html

Me and the Cat

www.meandthecat.com/

Mystic Eye

www.escalix.com/freepage/mysticeye/

10/04/1998

Pleiades Passages

www.pleiades~net.com/voices/age/age.html

4/2/1999

Rites of Passage

www.tryskelion.com/crone1.htm

4/06/2004

Swampys Spirituality

www.pinn.net/~swampy/spiritindex.html

25/04/2004

Technocrone

www.geocities.com/Wellesley/Garden/3741

11/03/1998

The Crones Cauldron

http://boondock.com/crone/

27/5/1999

The Crone Pages

www.geocities.com/kerrdelune/crone_pages.html

The Crones Poetry Pages

members.tripod.com/~magique_/index.html

27/5/1999

12/04/1998

15/06/2003

241

The Crone Project

www.geocities.com/Wellesley/Garden/3371/

14/06/1998

Three Crones Poetry Workshop

www.geocities.com/threecrones/

21/09/2003

Tucson Crones

http://www.desertcronesoftucson.net/groups.html

24/06/2004

WEBSITE TITLE

URL

Crone at White Moon Gallery

http://www.thewhitemoon.com/gallery/Crone.html

3/06/2004

West Coast Crones

www.gayweb.com/wolfevideo/west.html

16/05/1998

Windchime Walkers Site

http://members.aol.com/wndchmwlks/index.html

21/03/2001

Wise Old Crone

http://snakeandsnake.com/woc.htm

16/05/1998

RETRIEVED

242

Appendix II
ETHICAL DOCUMENTATION
Imaging the Crone Workshop
??Information Statement
Crone Counsel VII Focus Groups
??
Workshop Handout
??Overview
??Recording Crone Voices Information Statement
and Authorization Form
??Recording Crone Voices Discussion Themes
The Crone Project and [email protected]
??Research Summary
??Webcrones Mailing List Guidelines and Ground Rules

243

Imaging the Crone Collectively


INFORMATION STATEMENT
Gail McCabe, SSW MA
Doctoral Candidate, Graduate Program in Sociology
York University 4700 Keele Street Toronto, ON Canada M3J 1P3
I am a doctoral candidate in Sociology working towards a PhD degree. I have two reasons for attending this
workshop. The first reason is that I began to identify as a Crone a couple of years ago and I want to find out why? I
discovered Helens website and decided to attend the workshop as a way to do that. Second, I have to do research on
some social phenomenon of interest for my doctoral dissertation, and I think I might want to adopt the Crone as the
focus for my study. Therefore, my participation in the workshop counts as a sort of tentative research using the
participant observation method. I am not only a participant in the workshop. I am also an observer in order to learn
more about the Crone archetype and the women who are interested in her. My goal as a participant observer is to
become more informed and to describe the interactions of the workshop and the participants as a group as opposed to
describing personal details of any one particular individual.
As a sociologist, I am required to provide an information statement to those I observe about my interests as
well as a statement concerning the ethical principles of Sociology prior to doing the observation. The key ethical
issues here are informed consent, anonymity, confidentiality and information sharing.
Informed Consent
With Helens consent, I am providing this information statement to you. We will discuss the statement at the beginning
of the workshop and I will answer any questions you have. Following the discussion session, we will know whether
there is consensus for me to continue as a participant observer. If there is no consensus, then I will continue solely as
a participant.
If I continue as participant observer and at some point, during the session a sensitive issue arises and you do not wish
to continue in this way, if you let me know, I will undertake to discontinue my observer role. Likewise, if at some point
at a later date, you have some misgivings about the session, if you inform me I will report my findings as if you were
not present and nothing will indicate that you were.
Anonymity
I will undertake not to include any personal or sensitive information that might be discussed in this workshop in any of
my papers or publications relative to my study. I will ensure that no details are included in any of my papers that would
enable any reader to identify you.
Confidentiality
I will hold any statements made in this workshop that are not directly related to the Crone archetype and the interests I
have outlined in this statement in confidence and will not include them in any write-ups, publications, discussions or
presentations relative to my study.
Information Sharing
I will undertake to share any papers written about this workshop with you. Should you have an interest in receiving
those papers, please provide your contact information on the sheet at the door to enable me to do so.
Thank you for reading this statement and participating in the process outlined above with me.
Gail McCabe, SSW MA
August 17, 1998
If you have any questions in the future or simply want further information, please contact me: Gail McCabe,
Sociology, York University, (416) 736-2100; residence (905) 858-9063; e-mail: [email protected]

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