Mourning Glaciers: Animism Reconsidered through Ritual and Sensorial Relationships with Mountain Entities in the Alps
Details
Serval ID
serval:BIB_79CDB7ED3C45
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Mourning Glaciers: Animism Reconsidered through Ritual and Sensorial Relationships with Mountain Entities in the Alps
Journal
Humans
ISSN
2673-9461
Publication state
Published
Issued date
11/10/2023
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
3
Number
4
Pages
239-250
Language
english
Abstract
The transformation due to climate change of the high Alpine mountains is intensifying. A real disruption in the perception of this milieu and in the ways of interacting with it is ongoing, as evidenced by recent funeral ceremonies organised for disappearing glaciers. The investigation and documentation of the alternative interactions with mountain entities, such as glaciers, is challenging the very existence of the “Great Divide” that modernity has supposedly created between humans and non-humans. Through ethnographic observations and semi-directed interviews, the conducted study uncovers in the Valais Alps and in the Mont Blanc massif the hidden relationships developed with their environment by high-mountain people, such as glaciologists, mountain guides, or crystal hunters. It shows how they relate with specific glaciers or rock walls, listen to them, see them as living and dying, and build up new attention schemes and forms of attachments. It, therefore, allows a first characterisation of what may be akin to a form of animism in a Western context, reputedly naturalistic.
Keywords
animism, human/non-human relations, cultural anthropology, high mountain, glaciers, rituals, sensoriality, personification, Alps, climate change
Open Access
Yes
Funding(s)
Swiss National Science Foundation / P5R5PS_203062
Create date
30/05/2024 10:30
Last modification date
31/05/2024 6:19