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Affective Entanglements: Human-Nonhuman Relations in Buddhist Ecologies of Feeling
Author Schröer, Frederik (著)
Source Journal of Global Buddhism
Volumev.25 n.1 Special Focus: Buddhism in the Anthropocene
Date2024
Pages27 - 43
PublisherJournal of Global Buddhism
Publisher Url https://www.unilu.ch/en/faculties/faculty-of-humanities-and-social-sciences/institutes-departements-and-research-centres/department-for-the-study-of-religions/
LocationLucerne, Switzerland
Content type期刊論文=Journal Article
Language英文=English
NoteAuthor Affiliation: Max Planck Institute for Human Development, Germany.
Keywordfear; forest; Pali; Jataka; care
AbstractThis article reflects on key concepts in early South Asian Buddhism and their potential for creative dialogue with current concepts of research at the philosophical forefront of ecological thinking. It explores the role of feelings---that is, both bodily affects and culturally formed emotions---as crucial in negotiating the relations between humans and nonhumans and their environments. To this end, the concept of affective entanglement is proposed as a way of describing and analysing the condition of constitutive ecological linkage articulated through feelings and based in the fundamental interdependence of all phenomena in the world. Through careful analysis of a series of important early Buddhist Pali texts dealing with forested environments, this article explores how the early Buddhist teaching can challenge and enrich how we think of persons and bodies in relation to other beings and environments. Through a discussion of the powerful emotion of fear and the importance of vulnerability, the article develops thoughts on how Buddhist emotional practices as practices of care can inspire new approaches in today's times of escalating ecological crisis and acute vulnerability in coexisting and intersecting human and nonhuman pluriworlds.
Table of contentsWorld and Experience 29
Fear in the Wild Forest 30
Assemblage, Contact, and Affective Entanglement 32
Vulnerability and Care 36
Conclusion 39
Acknowledgements 40
Author Details 40
References 40
ISSN15276457 (E)
DOI10.26034/lu.jgb.2024.3812
Hits114
Created date2024.08.12
Modified date2024.08.13



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