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Wilderness in Mythology and Religion: Approaching Religious Spatialities, Cosmologies, and Ideas of Wild Nature PDF

352 Pages·2012·3.513 MB·English
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Wilderness in Mythology and Religion Religion and Society Edited by Gustavo Benavides, Kocku von Stuckrad and Winnifred Fallers Sullivan Volume 55 De Gruyter Wilderness in Mythology and Religion Approaching Religious Spatialities, Cosmologies, and Ideas of Wild Nature Edited by Laura Feldt De Gruyter ISBN 978-1-61451-224-0 e-ISBN 978-1-61451-172-4 ISSN 1437-5370 LibraryofCongressCataloging-in-PublicationData ACIPcatalogrecordforthisbookhasbeenappliedforattheLibraryofCongress. BibliographicinformationpublishedbytheDeutscheNationalbibliothek TheDeutscheNationalbibliothekliststhispublicationintheDeutscheNationalbibliografie; detailedbibliographicdataareavailableintheInternetathttp://dnb.dnb.de. ”2012WalterdeGruyter,Inc.,Boston/Berlin Printing:Hubert&Co.GmbH&Co.KG,Göttingen (cid:2)Printedonacid-freepaper PrintedinGermany www.degruyter.com Contents Laura Feldt 1. Wilderness in Mythology and Religion ................. 1 Jan N. Bremmer 2. Greek Demons of the Wilderness: the case of the Centaurs 25 Laura Feldt 3.Wilderness andHebrew Bible Religion –fertility,apostasy and religious transformation in the Pentateuch ................. 55 Ingvild Sælid Gilhus 4.“Themountain,adesertplace”:Spatialcategoriesandmythical landscapes in the Secret Book of John ..................... 95 Dag Øistein Endsjø 5. “The truth is out there”: Primordial lore and ignorance in the wilderness of Athanasius’ Vita Antonii .................... 113 Marianne C. Qvortrup Fibiger 6. Wilderness as a Necessary Feature in Hindu Religion ...... 131 Thomas Hoffmann 7. Notes on Qur’a¯nic Wilderness – and its absence .......... 157 Jens Peter Schjødt 8.Wilderness, Liminality,andtheOtherin Old Norse Mythand Cosmology ......................................... 183 Anne-Christine Hornborg 9. Making a Garden out of the Wilderness: landscape, dwelling and personhood in the encounter between European settlers and the Mi’kmaq in “New France” .......................... 205 Robert A. Segal 10. William Robertson Smith on the Wilderness ............ 229 Morten Axel Pedersen 11. The Taiga Within. Topography and personhood in Northern Mongolia ........................................... 241 VI Contents Graham Harvey 12.Ritualis EtiquetteintheLarger thanHumanWorld:thetwo wildernesses of contemporary Eco-Paganism ............... 265 Bron Taylor 13. Wilderness, Spirituality and Biodiversity in North America – tracing an environmental history from Occidental roots to Earth Day ............................................... 293 Contributor biographies ............................... 325 Index .............................................. 329 1. Wilderness in Mythology and Religion Laura Feldt* 1. Introduction1 Wilderness is often understood as a place where humans have not fully “infected” nature, as uncontaminated by ‘civilization’ (Cronon 1995; Oehlschlager 1991; Oehlschlager 2005; Garrard 2004,59). Wilderness has been imagined as a part of the solution to humankind’s problematic relationship withthenon-human world,andascrucial tounderstandings ofnatureasalterity.Yet,anyunderstandingof wildernessisofcoursepro- foundly cultural. Ideas of natural wildernesses from deep forests, arid de- serts, vast steppes and uninhabitable mountains to the depths of the ocean, the rainforest, and the inland ice have played important roles in the history of religions and still do so contemporarily – in religious ideas, narratives, rituals, cosmologies, and in everyday practices. People go to the wilderness to meet themselves, their demons, and their gods; it is simultaneously framed as refuge, paradise, waste land, and hell; it is where you can be lead astray, into idolatry or death, or where you can discover a new subjectivity, where you may find the deepest wisdom or great ignorance. Ideas of the role of various natural environments in diverse religions have also influenced theoretical work on what “religion” is and what it does, from the early days of the scientific study of religion untiltoday.Forinstance,itmightbesaidthatideasof wildernessplayeda role in the early studies of ‘primitive cultures’ and animism, the religion of ‘theSemites’,over theinterest in theGoldenBough (Frazer 1990)and the worship of nature to, perhaps, discussions about the naturalness of religion today. * Laura Feldt gratefully acknowledges a grant from the Danish Council for Inde- pendent Research in the Humanities that enabled the research behind this vol- ume. 1 IwishtothankIngvildS.GilhusandJanN.Bremmer warmlyfortheirhelpful comments. 2 Laura Feldt Wilderness mythology is probably one of the most abiding creations inthehistoryofreligions.Itdelimitsthepresenceof“theworld”andver- balises anatural/imagined frontier.Wilderness in mythology andreligion isaspaceofencounter–betweenthehumanselfandsupernaturalothers, and between humans and a natural alterity. Wilderness mythology resur- facesin wildlife andnature preservation discourses andstillserves asare- positoryof identityformationtodayinvaryingformsofsocialpractice.It isclearlyaspaceofnatural,cultural,andsocialsignificance.Itsinteresting multiplicity calls for new approaches that venture beyond previous di- chotomizing perspectives. For what are the specific relations between the world’s religions and its imagined and real wilderness areas? Analyses of religious conceptions of wilderness and wild nature may throwimpor- tant light on how humans interact with their ‘natural’surroundings and how they respond to the climate debates, as they represent the imagined sideof territoriesandclimates.Thecontributionsof thisbookinvestigate the territory/climate cluster of wilderness in religions past and present, as well as in the history of the study of religion. It intervenes analytically in the conversation on religious space, climate and nature by analyzing the religious construction/production of wilderness, and the uses, functions, and history of wilderness in diverse contexts. In spite of its provoking and inspiring hybridity, wilderness has nei- ther previously been subject to detailed scrutiny from a comparative and cross-cultural history of religions perspective, nor has it been subject to extensive study or theorising within the humanistic study of religion. Wilderness has, rather, been investigated as parts of eco-theology (e.g., Deane-Drummond 2004; Eaton 2005; Jasper 2004), by literary critics (e.g., Gersdorf and Mayer 2006; Graulund 2006; Garrard 2004, Heise 2009, et al.), or by philosophers and historians (Cronon 1995; Oelschlager 1991). Wilderness is, in the study of religion, an under-the- orizedconcept and anunder-investigated theme. Thisbookaddressesthe need for humanistic, anthropological and historical investigations of reli- gionandwilderness. Assuch,itisacontributiontothedebateontheuse of natural spaces in the study of religion. It contributes to the field by presenting a stimulating variety of theoretical approaches and case stud- ies, thus advancing comparative and cross-cultural research on religion and wilderness. As Timothy Morton points out, thought, including the ecological thought, has long placed nature ‘over yonder’, as a thing in the distance (Morton2007,1–28)and theideaof wilderness hashadarole toplayin this. Yet, the religious materials analysed in this book clearly demonstrate

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