Books, Poetry, Art and More
Brand New To Christian Animism? Some ideas for where to start learning
- Noel Moules at Nomad Podcast: Christian Animism and the Re-enchantment of the World
- Hunting Magic Eels: Recovering an Enchanted Faith in a Skeptical Age By Richard Beck
- Green Priestcraft Presentation by Shawn Sanford Beck
- The City is a Labyrinth: A Walking Guide for Urban Animists By Sarah Kate Inistra Winter
- Animate Earth: Science, Intuition and Gaia By Stephan Harding
Advocacy, Action on Climate Justice and Land Reform
- ASLE Website: The Association for the Study of Literature and Environment (ASLE) seeks to inspire and promote intellectual work in the environmental humanities and arts. Our vision is an inclusive community whose members are committed to environmental research, education, literature, art and service, environmental justice, and ecological sustainability.
- As Long as the Grass Grows: The Indigenous Fight for Environmental Justice, From Colonization to Standing Rock By Dina Gilio-Whitaker
- Big Lonely Doug: The Story of One of Canada’s Last Great Trees By Harley Rustad
- Climate Justice Alliance Website: formed in 2013 to create a new center of gravity in the climate movement by uniting frontline communities and organizations into a formidable force. Our translocal organizing strategy and mobilizing capacity is building a Just Transition away from extractive systems of production, consumption and political oppression, and towards resilient, regenerative and equitable economies. We believe that the process of transition must place race, gender and class at the center of the solutions equation in order to make it a truly Just Transition.
- Cultural Survival Website: Our work on the front lines of advocacy with international Indigenous communities is predicated on the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples and our programming works to inform Indigenous people of their rights, issues and threats affecting their communities. Cultural Survival believes that vibrant and durable communities rest on the principles of self-determination, human rights, informed citizenry and access to information, the freedom of expression, and the right to organize and shape the future in a way consistent with one’s tradition, language, culture and community – and we believe Indigenous Peoples have the power and solutions to solve many of today’s problems when respected and empowered to do so.
- Dark Mountain Project Website
- Ecologist: Informed by Nature Website: Environmental Affairs Platform
- Ecopeace Middle East Website: Founded in 1994, organization that brings together Jordanian, Palestinian and Israeli environmentalists to promote cooperative efforts to protect shared environmental heritage.
- Edge Effect Podcast The official podcast of EDGE EFFECTS, the digital magazine produced by the Center for Culture, History, and Environment (CHE) in the Nelson Institute for Environmental Studies at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. Each episode features interviews with path-breaking thinkers about cultural and environmental change across the full sweep of human history
- Fight the Fire: Green New Deals and Global Climate Jobs. Free Download By Jonathan Neele
- Honor the Earth.org Indigenous led intiatives to address climate chaos, destruction from fossil fuels, how to be protectors of creation. Welcome Water Protectors. The Rights of Nature. Letters to Enbridge
- Icarus Complex Magazine: A dedicated publication that gathers discourse about climate issue in one publication, targeted at a mainstream audience.
- Indigenous Foundations an information resource on key topics relating to the histories, politics, and cultures of the Aboriginal peoples of Canada. This website was developed to support students in their studies, and to provide instructors, researchers and the broader public with a place to begin exploring topics that relate to Aboriginal peoples, cultures, and histories. Indigenous Foundations was developed by the First Nations Studies Program at the University of British Columbia, located on the traditional, ancestral, and unceded territory of the Musqueam people.
- Indigenous Knowledge Commons
- Meet Queen Quet, Leader of the Gullah/Geechee Nation. Interview with Marquetta L Goodwine in Fordham News by Chris Gosier 12/20
- Planetary Solidarity: Global Women’s Voices on Christian Doctrine and Climate Justice By Graci Ji-Sun Kim, Hilda P Koster Eds.
- Seven Teachings of the Anishinaabe in Resistance Directed by Suez Taylor: LN3 features indigenous firebrands Winona Laduke, Tara Houska, and poet-hip hop artist ThomasX, as they lead an alliance to take on Big Oil and their enablers at the institutional level, and on the frontlines. This is the battle for Earth.
- Sharing the Earth: An International Environmental Justice Reader. Edited by Elizabeth Ammons and Modhumita Roy
- Silent Spring By Rachel Carson
- Soil and Soul: People Versus Corporate Power by Alastair McIntosh
- The Mother Tree Project
- Threshold Podcast: Threshold is a public radio show and podcast that tackles one pressing environmental issue each season. We report the story where it’s happening through a range of voices and perspectives. Our goal is to be a home for nuanced journalism about human relationships with the natural world.
- To Be a Water Protector: The rise of the Wiindigoo Protectors by Winona LaDuke
- Unceded Land: The Case for W’etsuwet’en Sovereignty
- Upstander Project Website
- Where the Leaves Fall Magazine: Where the Leaves Fall is a magazine that considers local and global experiences and knowledge as a pathway to healing our relationship with nature, with culture, with community and with our home, the Earth. We present voices that are often marginalised – such as Indigenous leaders, environmentalists and scientists – who can help us understand how to relocate ourselves in the natural world and ensure a future on Earth.
- https://www.resurgence.org/
- Yellowhead Institute: The Institute is a First Nation-led research centre based in the Faculty of Arts at Ryerson University in Toronto, Ontario. Privileging First Nation philosophy and rooted in community networks, Yellowhead is focused on policies related to land and governance. The Institute offers critical and accessible resources for communities in their pursuit of self-determination. It also aims to foster education and dialogue on First Nation governance across fields of study, between the University and the wider community, and among Indigenous peoples and Canadians.
Animism
- Animism: An interview with Graham Harvey Religious Studies Project
- Animist Jottings Website: Occasional Ruminations on Animism in Theory and Practice
- Animism of the Nilotics and Discourses of Fundamentalism in Sudan by Kuel Maluil Jok
- Animism: Respecting the Living World by Graham Harvey
- Christian Animism By Shawn Sanford Beck
- Christian Animism, Green Spirit Theology, and the Global Crisis Today Book Chapter by Mark I Wallace
- Everyday Animism Podcast 35 Episodes from April 2018-July 2019 hosted by Kelley Harrell, Brandice Schnabel, and Janet Roper
- Explorations in Animist Materialism: Notes on Reading/Writing African Literature, Culture, and Society by Harry Garuba (2003) Public Culture. Note: Sorry to say full access to this article is behind various paywalls
- Introducing Christian Animism: Shawn Sanford Beck Website
- The Handbook of Contemporary Animism Edited by Graham Harvey
- Noel Moules at Nomad Podcast: Christian Animism and the Re-enchantment of the World
- On Animism, Modernity/Colonialism, and the African Order of Knowledge: Provisional Reflections by Harry Garuba. Journal #36 (2012) e-flux blog. Harry Garuba is an author and Professor for African Literature and Postcolonial Literary and Cultural Theory and Director of the Centre for African Studies at the University of Cape Town. His main research interests embrace contemporary African art and African Modernity.
- Radical Animism: Reading for the End of the World by Jemma Deer
- Roots and All Podcast
- To the Best of Our Knowledge Podcast episode on Shapeshifting
Art, Cinema and Video Explorations of Creation, Land and Justice
A collaboration with plants in two parts by Ian Campbell
A Line Made by Walking. Richard Long 1967. Nature has always been recorded by artists, from prehistoric cave paintings to twentieth-century landscape photography. I too wanted to make nature the subject of my work, but in new ways. I started working outside using natural materials like grass and water, and this evolved into the idea of making a sculpture by walking … My first work made by walking, in 1967, was a straight line in a grass field, which was also my own path, going ‘nowhere’. In the subsequent early map works, recording very simple but precise walks on Exmoor and Dartmoor, my intention was to make a new art which was also a new way of walking: walking as art.
(Tufnell 2007, p.39.)
Anne Campbell Artist from Isle of Lewis: My work is concerned with place, specifically with my native island of Lewis and the village of Bragar where my family have lived for many generations. I have always been interested in the interaction between the land and the living things which spend their lives here or pass through: the traces left behind, whether on the earth and stones or in the memory and imagination. I have studied this interaction through the disciplines of art, ecology and archaeology.
Apausalypse: From IMDB: Apausalypse is a creative documentary shot in Iceland during the great pause when the Coronavirus closes the world. A moment in history is captured and empty spaces are filled with art when all other stages are closed.
Dersu Uzala Film by Akira Kurasawa. Academy Award for Best International Film in 1975. Edited from IMDB: Dersu Uzala is named after the character played by Maxim Munzuk who has lived in the Mongolian/ Siberian countryside since birth. When he wanders into a Russian exploration party led by Capt. Vladimir Arseniev (Yuri Solomin) the captain hires the curious person as a guide. His knowledge and experience are unlike anything these soldiers have encountered, with his capacity to communicate with animals and understand the rhythms of the natural world. Deeply connected to the stories and life of the wilderness where he has always lived, the old Dersu Uzala tells the foreigners stories about the land proving to them that he can out-hunt and out-shoot the best of them, and managing to save the life of the captain during one snow storm. The soldiers develop a deep respect and affection for Dersu and Capt. Arseniev brings the man into his home in the city to live with him and his wife and son bringing to the family an exposure to stories and a way of living that they could not gain from anywhere else in their city life. The domesticated lifestyle doesn’t suit Dersu whose daily activities clash with the local constabulary. Dersu decides to go back to the untamed land and Arseniev gives him his best rifle to take with him. Eventaully Arseniev seeks out his old comrade but discovers that fate has intervened.
Enough is Enough Karine Polwart and Oi Musica and the Soundhouse Choir. Video: What the Earth might say to us. This piece of music has been composed with the express purpose of inviting choirs, street bands and community groups to learn and perform it, and join an exciting, collective musical response to the UN Climate Change Conference (COP26) which will be held in Glasgow in November 2021.
Hamish Fulton: Walking Artist
Literary and Cultural Plant Studies Network at the University of Arizona
Miyazaki’s Animism Abroad: The Reception of Japanese Religious Themes by American and German Audiences by Eriko Ogihara-Shchuck
Miyazaki Hayao’s Animism and the Anthropocene by Shoko Yoneyama Article Abstract: The need for a reconsideration of human-nature relationships has been widely recognized in the Anthropocene. It is difficult to rethink, however, because there is a crisis of imagination that is deeply entrenched within the fundamental premises of modernity. This article explores how ‘critical animism’ developed by Miyazaki Hayao of Studio Ghibli can address this paucity of imagination by providing alternative ways of knowing and being. ‘Critical animism’ emerged from the fusion of a critique of modernity with informal cultural heritage in Japan. It is a philosophy that perceives nature as a non-dualistic combination of the life-world and the spiritual-world, while also emphasizing the significance of place. Miyazaki’s critical animism challenges anthropocentrism, secularism, Eurocentrism, as well as dualism. It may be the ‘perfect story’ that could disrupt the existing paradigm, offering a promise to rethink human-nonhuman relationships and envisaging a new paradigm for the social sciences.
Nature: Documents of Contemporary Art. Ed by Jeffrey Kastner: “Nature, as both subject and object, has repeatedly been rejected and reclaimed by artists over the last half century. With the dislocation of disciplinary boundaries in visual culture, art that is engaged with nature has also forged connections with a new range of scientific, historical and philosophical ideas. Developing technologies make our interventions into natural systems both increasingly refined and profound. And advances in biological and telecommunication technology continually modify the way we ‘present’ ourselves. So too are artistic representations of nature (human and otherwise) being transformed.“
Spirited Away by Hayao Miyazaki. A review of this animated movie as an argument for Animism.
The Living Stage: The Living Stage combines stage design, permaculture and community engagement to create a recyclable, biodegradable and edible performance space. Part theatre and part garden, the project collaborates with local permaculturists to build ‘living’ stages that are specific to site and community. The Living Stage considers ecological principles and environmental impact as opportunities rather than constraints: ethics that can illuminate, and be integral to aesthetics.
Robert McFarlane on Landscape and the Human Heart
Stress Call of the Stinging Nettle
Tulladonna: Documentary From the 1960s and onwards, Tulladunna was home to Aboriginal cotton chippers and their families. In this short documentary, the community shares memories of living, working, and being together on country. This research was supported by the Australian Government through the Australian Research Council and the Indigenous Land and Justice Research Hub at the University of Technology Sydney
Decolonization and Dismantling the Doctrine of Discovery.
The Doctrine of Discovery established a spiritual, political, and legal justification for colonization and seizure of land not inhabited by Christians. Foundational elements of the Doctrine of Discovery can be found in a series of papal bulls, or decrees, beginning in the 1100s, which included sanctions, enforcements, authorizations, explusions, admonishments, excommunications, denunciations, and expressions of territorial sovereignty for Christian monarchs supported by the Catholic Church. From: https://upstanderproject.org/firstlight/doctrine
Terra Nullius is the term used by British colonizers in Australia and Africa, to say that the land was empty and unused, and thus justifiably taken from Indigenous people already there. The link goes to an Australian educational website with interactive videos and information to further exploration of this topic. Mabo v Queensland was a landmark case fought over many years to acknowledge the dispossession of Indigenous people from their ancestral lands. In the Philippines the Regalian Doctrine was applied by the King of Spain as justification for that invasion. The link is to a 2012 UN resource reporting on meetings that engaged the legacy of the Doctrine of Discovery. Note that the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples was initially opposed by the US, Canada, New Zealand and Australia.
- As Long as the Grass Grows: The Indigenous Fight for Environmental Justice, From Colonization to Standing Rock By Dina Gilio-Whitaker
- Corporate Colonialism Factsheet from Yellowhead Institute in Canada
- Decolonizing Methodologies by Linda Tuhiwai Smith
- Doctrine of Discovery
- Dismantling the Doctrine of Discovery: Eastern Mennonite University Podcast interview with Erica Littlewolf
- Ditching the doctrine of discovery (and what that means for Canadian Law) by Senwung Luk
- Stolen Continents: The Americas Through Indian Eyes since 1492 by Ronald White: British author who studied archeology and anthropology. He has written numerous books about the legacy of colonisation.
- Unequal Impact: The Deep Links Between Racism and Climate Change June 2020 Interview in Yale Environment360 with activist Elizabeth Yeampierre
- Unsettling Truths: The Ongoing, Dehumanizing Legacy of the Doctrine of Discovery by Mark Charles and Soon-Chan Rha
- We Own This Now: What if the Land You Love Was Stolen? A play by Alison Brookins From the website: Chris has farmed the land his grandmother found as a home in Kansas after fleeing Russia almost 100 years ago; his daughter Riley is learning more about who was on that land before her Oma arrived, and the jarring connections she has to the fate of those people. We follow Chris and Riley as they navigate their changing relationship to each other and to the land their family has farmed for several generations. Diving into historical documents, absurd situations, and extended metaphors, the audience discovers alongside Riley and Chris how the Doctrine of Discovery (the legal framework that justifies theft of land and oppression of Indigenous Peoples) is still being used and causing harm today. We Own This Now provides a starting point for further conversation: What does it mean to “own” something? What is the relationship between “owning” and “taking” — and what is the relationship between “ownership” and (taking) responsibility?
- What is the Doctrine of Discovery Website
Fiction
- Ceremony by Leslie Marmon Silko
- Firekeeper’s Daughter by Angelline Bouilley
- Ishmael, The Story of B and My Ishmael by Daniel Quinn Note also music and artwork inspired by these novels on the website! https://www.ishmael.org/books/
- Semiosis Duology by Sue Burke
- Sharks in the Time of Saviors: A Novel by Kawai Strong Washburn
- Tales of Adam by Daniel Quinn
- Terra Nullius by Claire G Coleman. “Noongar writer Claire Coleman’s debut novel, Terra Nullius, envisions a continent disturbingly familiar and worryingly futuristic. Disturbing because it opens with a scenario of settler dispossession; worrying because Coleman’s stories serve as a critique of recent history and prophesy a “second wave invasion and a post-colonial future”. Sydney Morning Herald
- That Distant Land by Wendell Berry
- The Baron in the Trees By Italvo Calvino
- The Overstory by Richard Powers
- The Stone By Louise Erdrich Short Story from The New Yorker Sept 2019
- Tree By Melina Semphill Watts told from the perspective of a 229 year old Live Oak Tree in Californ
Memoir, Histories, and Literary Reflections
- A Herd of Red Deer by Frank Fraser Darling
- A Sand County Almanac By Aldo Leopold
- A Thousand Mile Walk to the Gulf By John Muir
- Black on Earth: African American Ecoliterary Reflections by Kimberly N. Ruffin
- Boarding School Seasons by Brenda J. Child
- Horizon by Barry Lopez
- #I Am Not Your Princess: Voices of Native American Women By Lisa Charleyboy & Mary Beth Leatherdale
- Landmarks by Robert Macfarlane
- My First Summer in the Sierra By John Muir
- On The Gentle Art of Tramping. Blog reflecting on Robert MacFarlane and Stephen Graham
- Palestinian Walks: Notes on a Vanishing Landscape. by Raja Shehadeh
- Pilgrim at Tinker Creek By Annie Dillard
- Poacher’s Pilgrimage:An Island Journey by Alastair McIntosh
- Ring of Bright Water: a Trilogy by Gavin Maxwell
- Smokehole: Looking to the wild in the time of the spyglass by Martin Shaw
- The Beak of the Finch by Jonathan Weiner
- The Edge of the Sea By Rachel Carson
- The Gentle Art of Tramping by Stephen Graham. First published in 1926, The Gentle Art of Tramping is as relevant now as then. Tramping is an approach: to nature, to humankind, to nations, to beauty, to life itself. This lost classic is a breath of fresh air for world-weary souls. It is a gentle art; know how to tramp and you know how to live. Know how to meet your fellow wanderer, how to be passive to the beauty of nature and how to be active to its wildness and its rigour. The adventure is not the getting there, it’s the ‘on-the-way’. It is not the expected, it is the surprise.
- The Great Conversation: Nature and the Care of the Soul by Lane Beldon
- The Forgiveness of Nature: The Story of Grass by Graham Harvey
- The Home Place: Memoirs of a Colored Man’s Love Affair with Nature By J. Drew Lanham
- The Icknield Way By Edward Thomas
- The Living Mountain: A celebration of the Cairngorm Mountains of Scotland by Nan Shepherd
- The Old Ways by Robert MacFarlane
- The Song of the Dodo: Island Biogeography in an Age of Extinctions by David Quammen
- The Songlines by Bruce Chatwin. The songlines are the invisible pathways that criss-cross Australia, tracks connecting communities and following ancient boundaries. Along these lines, Aboriginals passed the songs which revealed the creation of the land and the secrets of its past. In this magical account, Chatwin recalls his travels across the length and breadth of Australia seeking to find the truth about the songs and unravel the mysteries of their stories.
- The Snow Leopard by Peter Matthiessen
- They Called It Prairie Light: The Story of Chilocco Indian School by K. Tsianina Lomawaima
- Underland Robert MacFarlane
- Under the Sea-Wind by Rachel Carso
Poetry
- All One Breath by John Burnside
- Animist Poetry Podcast from Animism: Listening to the Land by Filip Tkaczyk & Nathan Uhlmeyer June 2020
- At the Fishhouses by Elizabeth Bishop
- Be Earth Now By Ranier Maria Rilke Recited by Joanna Macy and Anita Barrows
- Black Nature: Four Centuries of African American Nature Poetry Eds. Camille T. Dungy, Elizabeth Alexander, Alvin Aubert
- Dear Matafele Peinem Climate Change Poem Video
- Ecocriticism: Locating the Animist Figurings in Remi Raji’s Sea of My Mind. by Abiodun Babatunde Oluseye, Senayon Olaoluwa and Charles Ogbulogo (2020) Sage Open Access
- Eternal Forest Manifesto 2019 Evgenia Emets
- Homescape Poems: Solastalgia Ann E Michael
- Ocean. By Aimee Nezhukumatathil
- Othering by Tanya Davis
- Plumwood Mountain: An Australian Journal of Ecopoetry and Ecopoetics
- Terrain.org Poetry
- The Book of Feral Flora by Amanda Ackerman
- The Hundred Thousand Places by Thomas A. Clark
- The Methrow River Poems by William Stafford
- The Mind of Plants: A website bringing together short essays, narratives and poetry on plants and their interactions with humans.
- The Plant Poems Project
- The Silence of the Stars by David Wagoner
- What to Eat, What to Drink, What to Leave for Poison by Camille T. Dungy
- Whereas: Poems. By Layli Long Soldier
- Written River: A Journal of Ecopoetics: We are passionate about creativity as a means of transforming consciousness, both individually and socially. We hope to participate in a revolution to return poetry to the public discourse and a place in the world which matters. Of the many important issues of our times we feel that our relationship to the environment is of the most fundamental concern. Our publications reflect the ideal that falling in love with the earth is nothing short of revolutionary and that through our relationship to nature we can birth a more enlightened vision of life for the future. We believe that art and poetry are the universal language of the human experience and are thus most capable of transforming our vision of self and world.
Rewilding and Conservation
- Feral: Rewilding the Land, Sea and Human Life By George Monbiot
- Rewilding…conservation and conflict Article
- Rewilding: Transforming Conservation Methods Article By Sophie Johnson
Science and Reflection about Mother Earth
- An analysis of the impact of the Gaia Theory on Ecology and Evolutionary Theory Article
- Braiding Sweetgrass By Robin Wall Kimmerer
- Crane Music by Paul A. Johnsguard
- Feral: Rewilding the Land, Sea and Human Life By George Monbiot
- Finding the Mother Tree: Discovering the Wisdom of the Forest By Suzanne Simard
- Gaia hypothesis
- Gathering Moss By Robin Wall Kimmerer
- How Forests Think: Toward an Anthropology Beyond the Human by Eduardo Kohn
- Journey of the Universe By Brian Thomas Swimme and Mary Evelyn Tucker
- Journey of the Universe Film
- An analysis of the impact of the Gaia Theory on Ecology and Evolutionary Theory
- Paradox, Sunrise and a Thirsty Place Essay by Nina Elder
- Passive Flora? Reconsidering Nature’s Agency Through Human-Plant Studies (HPS) by Charles Ryan 2012
- Plant Intelligence and the Imaginal Realm by Stephen Harrod Buhner
- Plants Have So Much to Give Us, All We Have To Do is Ask: Anishinaabe Botanical Teachings By Mary Siisip Geniusz Edited by Wendy Makoons Geniusz
- Silent Spring by Rachel Carter
- The City is a Labyrinth: A Walking Guide for Urban Animists By Sarah Kate Inistra Winter
- The Language of Plants: Science, Philosophy, Literature by Monica Gagliano, John C. Ryan and Patricia Vieira Editors
- The Rebirth of Nature by Rupert Sheldrake
- The Spell of the Sensuous By David Abram
- The Wild Places Robert Macfarlane
- Underland Robert Macfarlane
Solastalgia This is a term coined by Australian philosopher Glenn Albrecht, referring to the distress human beings feel in reaction to the destruction of the natural world around them due to climate chaos, and also those whose localities have been destroyed by industrial encroachment and environmental disaster.
- Have you ever felt solastalgia? BBC Future, 2015
- Solastagia Climate Psychology Alliance
- Solastalgia: the distress caused by environmental change Albrecht et al, 2006
Spirituality, Culture, Philosophy and Theology
- Among Shamanism: Animist Spiritual Healing in America’s Urban Heartland. Phua Xiong, Chrles Numrich, Wu Chu Yongyuan, Deu Yang, Gregory Plotnikoff. Oxford Scholarship Online. A book chapter on Hmong shamanism in the US, abstract available
- A Native American Theology by Clara Sue Kidwell/ Homer Noley/ George E. “Tink” Tinker
- Animate Earth: Science, Intuition and Gaia By Stephan Harding
- A Primer in Ecotheology: Theology for a Fragile Earth By Celia E. Deane-Drummond
- Arctic Dreams by Barry Lopez
- Becoming Animal: An Earthly Cosmology by David Abram
- Befriending the Earth: A Theology of Reconciliation Between Humans and the Earth by Thomas Berry with Thomas Clarke SJ
- Beyond Nature and Culture by Philippe Descola
- Buffalo Shout, Salmon Cry: Conversations on Creation, Land Justice and Life Together Edited by Steve Heinrichs
- Coming Back to Life: Practices to Reconnect Our Lives, Our World by Joanna Macy and Molly Young Brown
- Dark Green Religion: Nature Spirituality and the Planetary Future by Bron Taylor. In this innovative and deeply felt work, Bron Taylor examines the evolution of “green religions” in North America and beyond: spiritual practices that hold nature as sacred and have in many cases replaced traditional religions. Tracing a wide range of groups—radical environmental activists, lifestyle-focused bioregionalists, surfers, new-agers involved in “ecopsychology,” and groups that hold scientific narratives as sacred—Taylor addresses a central theoretical question: How can environmentally oriented, spiritually motivated individuals and movements be understood as religious when many of them reject religious and supernatural worldviews? The “dark” of the title further expands this idea by emphasizing the depth of believers’ passion and also suggesting a potential shadow side: besides uplifting and inspiring, such religion might mislead, deceive, or in some cases precipitate violence. This book provides a fascinating global tour of the green religious phenomenon, enabling readers to evaluate its worldwide emergence and to assess its role in a critically important religious revolution.
- Dear White Peacemakers: Dismantling Racism with Grit and Grace by Osheta Moore
- Defending Mother Earth Edited by Jace Weaver
- Earthkeeping and Character: Exploring a Christian Ecological Virtue Ethic By Steven Bouma-Prediger
- Ecologies of Grace: Environmental Ethics and Christian Theology By Willis Jenkins
- Emergence Magazine Exploring culture, ecology and spirituality
- Encyclopedia of Religion and Nature Edited by Bron Taylor This is a link to a PDF on Research Gate, not the entire book
- Fingerprints of Fire…Footprints of Peace By Noel Moules
- Following Jesus in Invaded Space: Doing Theology on Aboriginal Land by Christopher Budden
- Forest Church: A Field Guide to Nature Connection for Groups and Individuals By Bruce Stanley
- Galileo’s Error by Philip Goff
- God is Red: A Native View of Religion By Vine Deloria Jr.
- Hunting Magic Eels: Recovering an Enchanted Faith in a Skeptical Age By Richard Beck
- Indigenous Traditions and Ecology: The Interbeing of Cosmology and Community Edited by John Grimm
- Liberation Ecology: An Interview with Leonardo Boff
- Magical Criticism: The Recourse of Savage Philosophy by Christopher Bracken from the press website: During the Enlightenment, Western scholars racialized ideas, deeming knowledge based on reality superior to that based on ideality. Scholars labeled inquiries into ideality, such as animism and soul-migration, “savage philosophy,” a clear indicator of the racism motivating the distinction between the real and the ideal. In their view, the savage philosopher mistakes connections between signs for connections between real objects and believes that discourse can have physical effects—in other words, they believe in magic. Christopher Bracken’s Magical Criticism brings the unacknowledged history of this racialization to light and shows how, even as we have rejected ethnocentric notions of “the savage,” they remain active today in everything from attacks on postmodernism to Native American land disputes. Here Bracken reveals that many of the most influential Western thinkers dabbled in savage philosophy, from Marx, Nietzsche, and Proust, to Freud, C. S. Peirce, and Walter Benjamin. For Bracken, this recourse to savage philosophy presents an opportunity to reclaim a magical criticism that can explain the very real effects created by the discourse of historians, anthropologists, philosophers, the media, and governments.
- Making Peace with the Land by Fred Bahnson and Norman Wirzba
- Native: Identity, Belonging and Rediscovering God by Kaitlin Curtice
- Rainbow Spirit Theology: Towards an Australian Aboriginal Theology By The Rainbow Spirit Elders
- Science and Non-Duality Website
- Shalom and the Community of Creation: An Indigenous Vision by Randy S. Woodley
- Shinrin Yoku: The Art of Japanese Forest Bathing by Yoshifumi Miyazaki
- Shomrei Adamah: Keepers of the Earth Exploring ecological roots of the Jewish Faith, founded in 1988, archived information and links Website
- Soul Hunters: Hunting Animism and Personhood among the Siberian Yukaghirs by Rane Willerslev from the website: This is an insightful, highly original ethnographic interpretation of the hunting life of the Yukaghirs, a little-known group of indigenous people in the Upper Kolyma region of northeastern Siberia. Basing his study on firsthand experience with Yukaghir hunters, Rane Willerslev focuses on the practical implications of living in a “hall-of-mirrors” world—one inhabited by humans, animals, and spirits, all of whom are understood to be endless mimetic doubles of one another. In this world human beings inhabit a betwixt-and-between state in which their souls are both substance and nonsubstance, both body and soul, both their own individual selves and reincarnated others. Hunters are thus both human and the animals they imitate, which forces them to steer a complicated course between the ability to transcend difference and the necessity of maintaining identity.
- Spiritual Ecology: The Cry of the Earth edited by Llewellyn Vaughan-Lee
- Stewards of Eden: What Scripture Says About the Environment and Why It Matters By Sandra L. Richter
- The Geography of Childhood: Why Children Need Wild Places by Gary Paul Nabhan and Stephen Trimble
- The Great Work: Our Way into the Future by Thomas Berry
- The Sweet Breathing of Plants: Women Writing on the Green World edited by Linda Hogan and Brenda Peterson
- The Earth Bible Project a website featuring a scholarly series by biblical researchers from Australia bringing eco-justice to the forefront of their understanding of the biblical texts
- The Hebrew Bible and Environmental Ethics Mari Joerstad
- The Paradise of God: Renewing Religion in an Ecological Age by Norman Wirzba
- The People at the Center: American Indian Religion and Christianity by Carl F. Starkloff
- The Spell of the Sensuous: Perception and Language in the More than Human World by David Abram
- The Relative Native: Essays on Indigenous Conceptual Worlds by Eduardo Viveiros de Castro
- The ReMembering and ReEnchanting Podcast with Sara Jolena Wolcott Sequoia Samanvaya: coming into deeper harmony with ancient living wisdom
- The Spirituality of Africa. An Interview with Jacob Olupona, Porfessor of Indigenous African Religions at Harvard Divinity School By Anthony Chiorazzi (2015) Harvard Gazette
- The Tao of Liberation: Exploring the Ecology of Transformation by Mark Hathaway and Leonardo Boff
- The Woven Universe: Selected Writings of Rev. Maori Marsden Edited by Te Ahukaramu Charles Royal
- Tribal Peoples for Tomorrow’s World By Stephen Corry
- Vibrant Matter: A Political Ecology of Things by Jane Bennet
- Wakeful World By Emma Restall Orr
- Walking Gently on The Earth by Lisa Graham McMinn and Megan Anna Neff
- Watershed Discipleship By Ched Myers
- When God Was a Bird by Mark Wallace
- Wisdom of the Elders by David Suzuki and Peter Knudso
- Wisdom Sits in Places by Keith Basso