Languages of Life and the Blending of Worlds

Radical Entanglement

Authors

  • Kocku von Stuckrad University of Groningen

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1558/jsrnc.23396

Keywords:

Experience of nature, natural philosophy, language, biosemiotics, radical entanglement, method and theory in the study of religion

Abstract

Addressing the links between religion and experiences of nature requires language, and at the same time it moves beyond linguistic forms of communication. After a brief review of the linguistic paradigm in the study of religion, the question of linguistic understandings of nature is addressed from two perspectives. First, linguistic approaches attempt to include experiences of nature in our knowledge about the natural world and the human place within it; these perspectives usually extend linguistic knowledge to poetic expressions. Second, approaches that problematize the focus on linguistic communication altogether favor non-linguistic or semiotic interpretations of human communication with the more-than-human world. Making use of biosemiotics and other interdisciplinary research, an argument is made for radical entanglement and a scholarly strategy to coordinate the languages of life and to blend the different worlds and perspectives that we find on the planet.

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Published

2024-01-08

Issue

Section

Special Issue - Religion + the Experience of Nature

How to Cite

Stuckrad, K. von. (2024). Languages of Life and the Blending of Worlds: Radical Entanglement. Journal for the Study of Religion, Nature and Culture, 18(1), 113–129. https://doi.org/10.1558/jsrnc.23396