DOAJ Open Access 2025

Religions in Extractive Zones: Methods, Imaginaries, Solidarities

Terra Schwerin Rowe Christiana Zenner Lisa H. Sideris

Abstrak

This essay serves as an expansive, conceptual anchor and scholarly argument that demonstrates the modality of “reflexive extractivist” religious studies and also orients the Special Issue on Religion in Extractive Zones. We demonstrate that critical religious and theological scholarship have existing tools and methods for deepening the study of extraction in the environmental humanities and related discourses. We make two interconnected arguments: that religion has been and continues to be produced out of extractive zones in the conflicts, negotiations, and strategic alliances of contact zones and that the complex production of sacred and secular in these zones can be fruitfully analyzed as imaginaries and counter-imaginaries of extraction. We present these arguments through a dialogical and critically integrative methodology, in which arguments from theorists across several disciplines are put into conversation and from which our insights emerge. This methodology leads to a final section of the essay that sets a framework for, and invites further dialogical and integrative scholarship on, the practical ethics of non- or counter-extractive academic research, scholarship, and publishing. Offering theoretical, methodological, and practical suggestions, we call for a turn toward reflexive extractivist religious studies, articulate the specific conceptual and methodological approaches linking religion and extraction, and thus set the framework and tone for the Special Issue.

Penulis (3)

T

Terra Schwerin Rowe

C

Christiana Zenner

L

Lisa H. Sideris

Format Sitasi

Rowe, T.S., Zenner, C., Sideris, L.H. (2025). Religions in Extractive Zones: Methods, Imaginaries, Solidarities. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel16070820

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Informasi Jurnal
Tahun Terbit
2025
Sumber Database
DOAJ
DOI
10.3390/rel16070820
Akses
Open Access ✓