Reading Group: TWP&F: Roundtable on Northern European Plant Magic & Folklore
Wednesday, Apr 09, 2025, 3:00 pm - 5:00 pm
Conference Room, Center for the Study of World Religions, 42 Francis Ave., Cambridge, MA
Registration is required.
Meets biweekly from 3-5 PM at the Center for the Study of World Religions.
Recent scientific research has shed light on the sophisticated ways plants and fungi sense, make sense of, and interact with the world. Alongside these discoveries is a wave of interest in the “more-than-human” humanities—a scholarship raising fundamental questions about the nature of the human and the non-human:
Wednesday, April 9, 2025, 3 – 5 pm: Roundtable on Northern European Plant Magic & Folklore with Christina Oakley Harrington, Historian and CSWR Scholar-in-Residence
Email plants@hds.harvard.edu to be added to the reading group mailing list
NATALIA SCHWIEN is an herbalist, wildlife rescue & rehabilitation apprentice, and Ph.D. candidate in the Study of Religion at Harvard University, where she recently completed a Master of Theological Studies degree with a focus on the intersection of ecology and spiritual practice. She researches relational ontologies, posthuman ethics, and diction on personhood in scientific discourse, specifically neuroscience. Her secondary work is in Celtic Studies on trans-species soul migration in mythology and plants addressed in the vocative in Old Irish poetry. Her work has been featured in New York Magazine, The New Yorker, Time Out New York, Vice, For The Wild, and more. For more information + publications, visit selkieprojects.com.
Meets biweekly from 3-5 PM at the Center for the Study of World Religions.
Recent scientific research has shed light on the sophisticated ways plants and fungi sense, make sense of, and interact with the world. Alongside these discoveries is a wave of interest in the “more-than-human” humanities—a scholarship raising fundamental questions about the nature of the human and the non-human:
- What is mind, where does it extend, and how?
- How do plants and fungi trouble our understanding of “thinking” and perhaps cause us to reconsider what it means to be human?
- What cultural frameworks give us opportunities to think about next means of engagement?
Wednesday, April 9, 2025, 3 – 5 pm: Roundtable on Northern European Plant Magic & Folklore with Christina Oakley Harrington, Historian and CSWR Scholar-in-Residence
Email plants@hds.harvard.edu to be added to the reading group mailing list
NATALIA SCHWIEN is an herbalist, wildlife rescue & rehabilitation apprentice, and Ph.D. candidate in the Study of Religion at Harvard University, where she recently completed a Master of Theological Studies degree with a focus on the intersection of ecology and spiritual practice. She researches relational ontologies, posthuman ethics, and diction on personhood in scientific discourse, specifically neuroscience. Her secondary work is in Celtic Studies on trans-species soul migration in mythology and plants addressed in the vocative in Old Irish poetry. Her work has been featured in New York Magazine, The New Yorker, Time Out New York, Vice, For The Wild, and more. For more information + publications, visit selkieprojects.com.

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