Sacred Sites as a Threat to Environmental Justice?: Environmental Spirituality and Justice Meet among the Diné (Navajo) and Other Indigenous Groups

I explore the intersection of environmental spirituality and environmental justice with special attention given to indigenous ecologies. Indigenous communities often employ the language of discrete "sacred sites" to protect portions of their lands from environmental harm. However, the conc...

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主要作者: Cladis, Mark Sydney 1958- (Author)
格式: 電子 Article
語言:English
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出版: Brill [2019]
In: Worldviews
Year: 2019, 卷: 23, 發布: 2, Pages: 132-153
Standardized Subjects / Keyword chains:B USA / 原住民 / 那 神聖的 / 環境 / 那 世俗的 / 環境意識 / Umweltgerechtigkeit
IxTheo Classification:AB Philosophy of religion; criticism of religion; atheism
AG Religious life; material religion
BB Indigenous religions
KBQ North America
NCG Environmental ethics; Creation ethics
Further subjects:B Environmental Justice
B environmental spirituality
B sacred geography
B sacred mountains
B Native American and indigenous religions
B 宗教
B Sacred Sites
B indigenous ecology
在線閱讀: Volltext (Resolving-System)
Volltext (doi)
實物特徵
總結:I explore the intersection of environmental spirituality and environmental justice with special attention given to indigenous ecologies. Indigenous communities often employ the language of discrete "sacred sites" to protect portions of their lands from environmental harm. However, the concept of the sacred in Western traditions is typically accompanied by its binary opposite, the profane. Do protected sacred sites implicitly license harm to such "profane" sites as low-income sacrifice zones? Is environmental spirituality in tension with environmental justice? After explicating this problem, I resolve it by exploring indigenous notions of the sacred—notions that are not binary. Indigenous notions allow for treating some discrete lands as places of special power and healing while still maintaining that all lands are sacred and worthy of environmental protection. These are not hierarchical notions of the sacred but variegated ones (or what I call hózhó sacred weaves).
ISSN:1568-5357
Contains:Enthalten in: Worldviews
Persistent identifiers:DOI: 10.1163/15685357-02302001