Toying with Animism: How Learning to Play Might Help Us Get Serious About the Environment

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Abstract

Scholars increasingly stress that getting serious about the environment will require a shift from Abrahamic and naturalist imaginaries that distinguish between culture and nature to, variously, “ecospirituality,” “dark green religion,” or animism. The first part of this article critiques this work on the grounds that it reifies rigid distinctions between “belief systems” or “ontologies,” and thus misrepresents both what needs to be aimed at and how to get there. In search of an alternative, the next two parts of this article draw on autoethnographic findings with non-Indigenous people involved in resisting resource extraction. I suggest that playfulness is an important component both of the imaginaries to be found among resisters and of the means of arriving at those imaginaries.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)83-109
JournalNature and Culture
Volume16
Issue number3
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Dec 2021
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • animism
  • dark green religion
  • ecology
  • ecospirituality
  • imaginaries
  • play
  • resource extraction

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