Gender, Nature and Religious Re-enchantment in the Anthropocene

A special issue of Religions (ISSN 2077-1444).

Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (31 December 2021) | Viewed by 33949

Special Issue Editors


E-Mail Website
Guest Editor
Department of Cultural Anthropology and Development Studies, Radboud University, 6500 HC Nijmegen, The Netherlands
Interests: gender, religion, and kinship in West Africa and South Asia; migration, pilgrimage and Marian devotion in Europe; human–nature relationships in the Anthropocene; sensory ethnography, life history methods and narrative analysis

E-Mail Website
Guest Editor
Department of Cultural Anthropology and Development Studies, Radboud University, 6500 HC Nijmegen, The Netherlands
Interests: human–nature entanglements; nature conservation and wilderness (in Europe); gender; tourism and indigeneity (particularly in Australia and the wider Pacific); performative and material cross-cultural encounters; ethnography and ethics

Special Issue Information

Dear Colleagues,

In the capitalist economy–ecology connection, people’s equal and spiritual partnership with nature is often incompatible with an equally persistent wish for material wealth and the possibilities of luxury that globalization and mobility have to offer. However, awareness of the necessity to fundamentally change humans’ impudent and exploitative attitude to nature is growing. Scholars of the Anthropocene criticize the self-evident anthropocentrism in scientific traditions and point to the need to broaden our analytical perspective beyond the human and to integrate the more-than-human world in our research projects. This shift brings along a renewed recognition of people’s embodied, affective and spiritual bonding with the natural world (e.g., rivers and seas, land and fields, rocks and mountains, animals, forests, trees and plants) as well as the supernatural world (e.g., saints, gods, spirits, ancestors). The focus of this Special Issue concerns contemporary societal and scientific debates on climate change and its devastating effects on the natural environment and people’s wellbeing. It explicitly adds a focus on gender and religion, as both aspects tend to be missing in these debates. Distancing oneself from anthropocentrism by studying the non-human in more-than-human relatedness apparently implies a disregard of gender. Simultaneously, Anthropocene scholarship tends to focus on secular contexts and ignore the influence of specific ontological and religious understandings of the world and associated practices of connecting with nature and re-enchanting the landscape.

Gender matters to human–nature relatedness in multiple ways. The human world is gendered and so is the natural world. Animals are male or female and socially learn to behave in gendered ways; likewise, plants can be male, female or androgynous. Landscapes are often perceived as gendered when, for example, physical forms or life-giving capacities become associated with femaleness or motherhood (e.g., Mother Nature, Mother Earth, female rivers and womb-like rocks). Human relatedness with nature is gendered as well. Men and women engage differently with nature and are differently placed regarding their vulnerabilities and agency in addressing environmental threats; in fact, these threats particularly affect women as the main actors in nurturing and taking care of the environment. Ecological crises are thus gendered as well. Both lived and ideological aspects of gendered human–nature relatedness incite us to study how, worldwide, environmental threats urge us ‘to go back to nature’ and eventually spark a positive revaluation of both women, nature, and religion, even in allegedly secular Western societies. For a long time, secularization and nature’s disenchantment symbolized modern progress and civilization. Current ecological threats, as well as the urgency to show solidarity with nature, open up possibilities to invigorate the magic and sacredness of landscapes. People’s search for intimacy and familiarity with a sentient and conscious nature creates renewed attention for animist practices and worldviews, as well as for re-interpretations and revitalizations of world religions. In recent scholarship on the Anthropocene, the concept of ‘new animism’, however, is often introduced without explicitly linking it to religion or religious innovation in the 21st century.

This Special Issue aims to put gender and religion centre stage in discussing more-than-human sociality in the Anthropocene. We welcome theoretical papers as well as extended case studies that discuss the central topic cross-culturally and from different disciplinary perspectives. We aim to include a variety of studies in rural, urban and religiously diverse contexts. 

 

Possible topics for contributions are:

  • Women’s and men’s attitudes to nature in relation to their belonging to a particular religious or cultural context;
  • The femininity and masculinity of nature, e.g., in relation to notions of wilderness;
  • Nature pilgrimages in various religious and cultural contexts/religious tourism in natural sites/pilgrimages to sacred landscapes in world religions;
  • Animism in various societies;
  • New age religion—new animism, modern paganism;
  • Female and male religious imagery linked to nature (for example, Mother Earth, Mother Mary or Mother Ganges), associated religious notions of creation, forgiveness or compassion, and values of solidarity, justice, and responsibility;
  • Gender and religion in environmental care, nature conservation, pollution or destruction;
  • Gendered bodies in relation to natural landscape bodies—embodied, intimate and affective connections with landscapes—bodily engagement, storytelling, ritual actions;
  • The meaning of sacred landscapes in migrants and refugees’ feelings of belonging;
  • Sensory practices of walking, dancing and eating to intimately connect to nature;
  • Gendered ways of creating kinship with nature;
  • Perspectives from (cultural and environmental) anthropology, ecofeminism, ecofeminist theology, green or ecotheology, ecology, material studies, animal studies and interspecies ethnography.

Dr. Catrien Notermans
Dr. Anke Tonnaer
Guest Editors

Manuscript Submission Information

Manuscripts should be submitted online at www.mdpi.com by registering and logging in to this website. Once you are registered, click here to go to the submission form. Manuscripts can be submitted until the deadline. All submissions that pass pre-check are peer-reviewed. Accepted papers will be published continuously in the journal (as soon as accepted) and will be listed together on the special issue website. Research articles, review articles as well as short communications are invited. For planned papers, a title and short abstract (about 100 words) can be sent to the Editorial Office for announcement on this website.

Submitted manuscripts should not have been published previously, nor be under consideration for publication elsewhere (except conference proceedings papers). All manuscripts are thoroughly refereed through a double-blind peer-review process. A guide for authors and other relevant information for submission of manuscripts is available on the Instructions for Authors page. Religions is an international peer-reviewed open access monthly journal published by MDPI.

Please visit the Instructions for Authors page before submitting a manuscript. The Article Processing Charge (APC) for publication in this open access journal is 1800 CHF (Swiss Francs). Submitted papers should be well formatted and use good English. Authors may use MDPI's English editing service prior to publication or during author revisions.

Keywords

  • gender
  • nature
  • (lived) religion
  • Anthropocene
  • more-than-human sociality
  • ritual
  • embodied practices
  • animism
  • nature pilgrimage
  • ecology
  • environmental care
  • sensory ethnography

Benefits of Publishing in a Special Issue

  • Ease of navigation: Grouping papers by topic helps scholars navigate broad scope journals more efficiently.
  • Greater discoverability: Special Issues support the reach and impact of scientific research. Articles in Special Issues are more discoverable and cited more frequently.
  • Expansion of research network: Special Issues facilitate connections among authors, fostering scientific collaborations.
  • External promotion: Articles in Special Issues are often promoted through the journal's social media, increasing their visibility.
  • e-Book format: Special Issues with more than 10 articles can be published as dedicated e-books, ensuring wide and rapid dissemination.

Further information on MDPI's Special Issue polices can be found here.

Published Papers (10 papers)

Order results
Result details
Select all
Export citation of selected articles as:
13 pages, 261 KiB  
Review
Revaluing Gender and Religion in the Anthropological Debate of the Anthropocene: A Critique on the Threefold Culture–Nature–Supernature Divide
by Catrien Notermans and Anke Tonnaer
Religions 2024, 15(2), 218; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15020218 - 14 Feb 2024
Viewed by 1764
Abstract
This study argues that current anthropological research on human–nature relatedness lacks an explicit focus on gender and religion. It brings to the forefront that most current studies in Anthropocene anthropology that move away from anthropocentrism and towards studying more-than-human relatedness imply a disregard [...] Read more.
This study argues that current anthropological research on human–nature relatedness lacks an explicit focus on gender and religion. It brings to the forefront that most current studies in Anthropocene anthropology that move away from anthropocentrism and towards studying more-than-human relatedness imply a disregard of gender that concerns both the ‘human’ and the ‘non-human’ in their mutual relationships. Presuming that the concept of sociality does not distinguish between human and nonhuman, the authors believe, however, that expressions of gender in more-than-human social relatedness cannot be denied. Simultaneously, they state that Anthropocene scholarship, by conceiving a secular future for humans restoring their relatedness with nature, is inclined to leave the ‘supernature’ out and to ignore experiences and embodied practices of enchantment in the modern world. By reviewing the feminist anthropological literature on the nature–culture divide and exploring the potential of enchantment as a way out of the secular condition of anthropology, the authors aim to restore a focus on gender and religion in anthropological Anthropocene scholarship while also transcending the threefold nature–culture–supernature divide. This review offers the theoretical prelude and introduction to the contributions of the Special Issue “Gender, Nature and Religious Re-enchantment in the Anthropocene”. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Gender, Nature and Religious Re-enchantment in the Anthropocene)
18 pages, 1492 KiB  
Article
Gender and Pan-Species Democracy in the Anthropocene
by Veronica Strang
Religions 2021, 12(12), 1078; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel12121078 - 6 Dec 2021
Cited by 3 | Viewed by 3229
Abstract
There are diverse historical trajectories in human societies’ relationships with the non-human world. While many small place-based groups have tried to retain egalitarian partnerships with other species and ecosystems, larger societies have made major transitions. In religious terms, they have moved from worshipping [...] Read more.
There are diverse historical trajectories in human societies’ relationships with the non-human world. While many small place-based groups have tried to retain egalitarian partnerships with other species and ecosystems, larger societies have made major transitions. In religious terms, they have moved from worshipping female, male or androgynous non-human deities, to valorising pantheons of deities that, over time, became semi-human and then human in form. Reflecting Durkheimian changes in social and political arrangements, movements towards patriarchy led to declining importance in female deities, and the eventual primacy of single male Gods. With these changes came dualistic beliefs separating Culture from Nature, gendering these as male and female, and asserting male dominion over both Nature and women. These beliefs supported activities that have led to the current environmental crisis: unrestrained growth; hegemonic expansion; colonialism, and unsustainable exploitation of the non-human world. These are essentially issues of inequality: between genders, between human groups, and between human societies and other living kinds. This paper draws on a series of ethnographic research projects (since 1992) exploring human-environmental relationships, primarily in Australia, the UK, and New Zealand, and on a larger comparative study, over many years, of a range of ethnographic, archaeological, theological, and historical material from around the world. It considers contemporary debates challenging Nature-Culture dualism and promoting ‘rights for Nature’ or—rejecting anthropocentricity to recognize an indivisible world—for the non-human communities with whom we co-inhabit ecosystems. Proposing new ways to configure ethical debates, it suggests that non-human rights are, like women’s rights, fundamentally concerned with power relations, social status, and access to material resources, to the extent that the achievement of ‘pan-species democracy’ and greater equality between living kinds goes hand-in-hand with social, political and religious equality between genders. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Gender, Nature and Religious Re-enchantment in the Anthropocene)
Show Figures

Figure 1

20 pages, 12776 KiB  
Article
Decolonizing the Gender and Land Rights Debate in India: Considering Religion and More-than-Human Sociality in Women’s Lived Land Relatedness
by Catrien Notermans and Luna Swelsen
Religions 2022, 13(3), 254; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13030254 - 17 Mar 2022
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 4281
Abstract
This article links the feminist debate on women’s land rights in India to the current academic debate on critical human-nature relationships in the Anthropocene by studying how married Hindu women weigh the pros and cons of claiming land in their natal family and [...] Read more.
This article links the feminist debate on women’s land rights in India to the current academic debate on critical human-nature relationships in the Anthropocene by studying how married Hindu women weigh the pros and cons of claiming land in their natal family and how they practice their lived relatedness to land in rural Udaipur (Rajasthan, North India). The article disentangles the complex issue of why women do not respond eagerly to Indian state policies that for a long time have promoted gender equality in the domain of land rights. In reaction to the dominant feminist debate on land rights, the authors introduce religion and more-than-human sociality as analytical foci in the examination of women’s responsiveness to land legislation. Their ethnographic study is based on fieldwork with married women in landowning families in four villages in Udaipur’s countryside. The authors argue that women have well-considered reasons not to claim natal land, and that their intimate relatedness to land as a sentient being, a nonhuman companion, and a powerful goddess explains the women’s reluctance to treat land as an inanimate commodity or property. Looking at religion brings to the fore women’s core business of making land fruitful and powerful, independent of any legislation. The authors maintain that a decolonized perspective on women’s land relatedness that takes religion and women’s multispecies perspective seriously may also offer a breakthrough in understanding why some women do not claim land. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Gender, Nature and Religious Re-enchantment in the Anthropocene)
Show Figures

Figure 1

17 pages, 1320 KiB  
Article
Domesticating Women, Animals, the Environment, and Spiritual Entities: Navigating Boundaries in the Pastoral Community of Limi, Nepal
by Tara Bate
Religions 2022, 13(6), 495; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13060495 - 30 May 2022
Viewed by 2490
Abstract
Through a case study of pastoralists in the Limi valley of north-western Nepal, this article revisits the notion of domestication with regards to Limey pastoral practice. Taken in its etymological sense, of “making part of one’s home” (domus), domestication could be [...] Read more.
Through a case study of pastoralists in the Limi valley of north-western Nepal, this article revisits the notion of domestication with regards to Limey pastoral practice. Taken in its etymological sense, of “making part of one’s home” (domus), domestication could be seen to draw a line between the inside and the outside. Yet, in Limi, these lines are blurred and shifting in nature: those that are a part of the home are not defined ontologically but relationally. Beyond strictly human–animal relations, domestication is here extended to involve politics and moralities of human differences such as gender and age, politics of relations to spiritual entities, and politics of nature. In Limi, pastoral practice inserts humans in a constellation of relations of co-domestication governed by religious precepts and gender norms, conceived as foundational to multispecies coinhabitation. Domestication is not a solely anthropogenic process but a composition of multiple—including nonhuman—agencies. And yet, pastoralism, as it is practiced today, also contributes to creating a space of hybridity and fluidity of social and ontological boundaries—between women and men, humans and livestock, domestic and wild animals, land and spiritual entities. This article, through a case study of Limey pastoralists’ gendered relation with herds and an animated landscape, adds to the understanding of domestication as not merely the domination of the human over the non-human but as an art of multispecies coinhabitation. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Gender, Nature and Religious Re-enchantment in the Anthropocene)
Show Figures

Figure 1

17 pages, 595 KiB  
Article
Slippery Entanglements: Spiritual and Gendered Experiences of Uncertainty in the Riverine Context of Bengali Char lands
by Annemiek Prins
Religions 2021, 12(11), 906; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel12110906 - 20 Oct 2021
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 2901
Abstract
This paper focuses on the spiritual and gendered experiences of dwelling-in-uncertainty in the context of Bengali char lands. Chars are temporary sandbanks in the river that continuously erode and re-emerge as the river changes course, thereby subjecting their inhabitants to repetitious cycles of [...] Read more.
This paper focuses on the spiritual and gendered experiences of dwelling-in-uncertainty in the context of Bengali char lands. Chars are temporary sandbanks in the river that continuously erode and re-emerge as the river changes course, thereby subjecting their inhabitants to repetitious cycles of losing and regaining land. In this paper I take the ethnographic literature on Bengali chars as a point of departure for exploring what the radical uncertainty of climate change might mean in a context where erosion or land loss does not necessarily involve the irreversible loss of a particular habitat, but often coincides with the anticipation of return. In analyzing the gendered ways in which char dwellers navigate this spiraling cycle of land loss and return, I draw specific attention to the churning, immaterial and spiritual powers that reside below and beyond the water, thereby highlighting the ways in which people are caught up in a land/waterscape that is only knowable to some extent. Whereas debates around climate change often treat religion and spirituality as either obstacles to knowledge or vehicles of meaningful storytelling, this paper deliberately foregrounds the more-than-human forces that linger at the periphery of people’s perception and knowledge of the world. In doing so, the paper seeks to move beyond probabilistic notions of climate change and adaptation towards a diverse understanding of the existential uncertainties of the Anthropocene. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Gender, Nature and Religious Re-enchantment in the Anthropocene)
Show Figures

Figure 1

24 pages, 2081 KiB  
Article
The ‘Church of the Poor and the Earth’ in Latin American Mining Conflicts
by Karolien van Teijlingen
Religions 2022, 13(5), 443; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13050443 - 16 May 2022
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 2382
Abstract
Conflicts over large-scale mining in Latin America have received growing scholarly attention. Whereas this scholarship has provided very valuable insights into the anatomies of these conflicts, the role of religious ideas and actors has received scant attention. This is remarkable, since the largest [...] Read more.
Conflicts over large-scale mining in Latin America have received growing scholarly attention. Whereas this scholarship has provided very valuable insights into the anatomies of these conflicts, the role of religious ideas and actors has received scant attention. This is remarkable, since the largest church of Latin America, the Catholic Church, seems to be in the midst of an ecological reorientation and increasingly emphasizes its image of the ‘Church of the poor and the Earth’. This research aims to fill this gap and examines the role of Catholic ideas and organizations in mining conflicts. Combining document analysis and ethnographic research on a mining project in Ecuador, the paper argues that Catholic ideas and actors play a significant role in discourses regarding nature and the subsoil, and in configuring the power relations part of conflicts. However, when engaging a historical and gendered perspective, it becomes clear that this role is not without ambiguities and tensions. The paper particularly urges researchers to remain critical of the reinforcements of a patriarchal system of power as well as the essentialization of indigenous cosmologies that continue to undergird present-day discourses and interactions of Catholic organizations in mining conflicts. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Gender, Nature and Religious Re-enchantment in the Anthropocene)
Show Figures

Figure 1

23 pages, 327 KiB  
Article
Entangled with Mother Nature through Anthropogenic and Natural Disasters
by Sina V. Pfister and Edwin B. P. de Jong
Religions 2022, 13(4), 341; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13040341 - 11 Apr 2022
Viewed by 2574
Abstract
Since the turn of the twenty-first century, there has been a guiding imperative in anthropology to better understand people’s entanglements with nature. This article sets out to investigate the emergence of spiritual ecologies in the Chilean town of Constitución. Unlike most previous studies, [...] Read more.
Since the turn of the twenty-first century, there has been a guiding imperative in anthropology to better understand people’s entanglements with nature. This article sets out to investigate the emergence of spiritual ecologies in the Chilean town of Constitución. Unlike most previous studies, we rethink the partial connections and entanglements of humans with nature through linking this to spirituality, environmental care and gender. By adopting a “kaleidoscopic perspective”, we aim to avoid a simplification or a singular representation of the (re-)entanglements with Mother Nature. Constitución provides an excellent setting for studying contemporary changes in human–nature entanglements as compounding crises of earthquakes, tsunami and forest fires, exacerbated by extensive timber production, that have struck the town during the past decade, have led to a resurgence by a large part of the population in interpreting and expressing their relationship with Mother Nature. Through intermittent ethnographic research between 2015 and 2019, we have concluded that the entanglements with Mother Nature in Constitución are the result of what we call Andean performative pragmatism, and the overrepresentation of women within the group of people who care for Mother Nature can be interpreted through an ecowomanist perspective that stands for the creation of social and environmental justice. As such, the findings offer a fresh and updated way to understand and interrogate the challenges confronting present-day human–nature relations in times of climate adaptation both in Chile and far beyond. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Gender, Nature and Religious Re-enchantment in the Anthropocene)
16 pages, 1033 KiB  
Article
Re-Feminizing Death: Gender, Spirituality and Death Care in the Anthropocene
by Mariske Westendorp and Hannah Gould
Religions 2021, 12(8), 667; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel12080667 - 23 Aug 2021
Cited by 7 | Viewed by 6090
Abstract
Critiques of ecologically harmful human activity in the Anthropocene extend beyond life and livelihoods to practices of dying, death, and the disposal of bodies. For members of the diffuse ‘New Death Movement’ operating in the post-secular West today, such environmental externalities are symptomatic [...] Read more.
Critiques of ecologically harmful human activity in the Anthropocene extend beyond life and livelihoods to practices of dying, death, and the disposal of bodies. For members of the diffuse ‘New Death Movement’ operating in the post-secular West today, such environmental externalities are symptomatic of a broader failure of modern death care, what we refer to here as the ‘Death Industrial Complex’. According to New Death advocates, in its profit-driven, medicalised, de-ritualized and patriarchal form, modern death care fundamentally distorts humans’ relationship to mortality, and through it, nature. In response, the Movement promotes a (re)new(ed) way of ‘doing death’, one coded as spiritual and feminine, and based on the acceptance of natural cycles of decay and rebirth. In this article, we examine two examples from this Movement that demonstrate how the relationship between death, religion, and gender is re-configured in the Anthropocene: the rise of death doulas as alternates to funeral directors and the invention of new necro-technologies designed to transform the dead into trees. We ask how gender is positioned within the attempt to remake death care, and show how, for adherents of the New Death Movement, gender is fundamental both to a critique of the Death Industrial Complex and to mending our distorted relationship to death. By weaving together women, nature, and spirituality, the caring labours of death doulas and the fertility symbolism of new arboreal necro-technologies build an alternative model of a good death in the Anthropocene, one premised on its (re)feminization. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Gender, Nature and Religious Re-enchantment in the Anthropocene)
Show Figures

Figure 1

15 pages, 851 KiB  
Article
Is Sacred Nature Gendered or Queer? Insights from a Study on Eco-Spiritual Activism in Switzerland
by Irene Becci and Alexandre Grandjean
Religions 2022, 13(1), 23; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13010023 - 28 Dec 2021
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 3177
Abstract
Among eco-spiritual activists in the French-speaking part of Switzerland, gendered notions such as “Mother Earth” or gendered “nature spirits” are ubiquitous. Drawing on an in-depth ethnographic study of this milieu (2015–2020), this article presents some of the ways in which these activists articulate [...] Read more.
Among eco-spiritual activists in the French-speaking part of Switzerland, gendered notions such as “Mother Earth” or gendered “nature spirits” are ubiquitous. Drawing on an in-depth ethnographic study of this milieu (2015–2020), this article presents some of the ways in which these activists articulate gender issues with reference to nature. The authors discuss the centrality of the notion of the self and ask what outputs emerge from linking environmental with spiritual action. We demonstrate that activists in three milieus—the New Age and holistic milieu, the transition network, and neo-shamanism—handle this link differently and thereby give birth to a variety of emic perspectives upon the nature/culture divide, as well as upon gender—ranging from essentialist and organicist views to queer approaches. The authors also present more recent observations on the increasing visibility of women and feminists as key public speakers. They conclude with the importance of contextualizing imaginaries that circulate as universalistic and planetary and of relating them to individuals’ gendered selves and their social, political, and economic capital. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Gender, Nature and Religious Re-enchantment in the Anthropocene)
Show Figures

Figure 1

20 pages, 10801 KiB  
Article
‘It Was Magical’: Intersections of Pilgrimage, Nature, Gender and Enchantment as a Potential Bridge to Environmental Action in the Anthropocene
by Avril Maddrell
Religions 2022, 13(4), 319; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13040319 - 2 Apr 2022
Viewed by 2579
Abstract
Centring on embodiment, gendered eco-spiritual responses to nature, enchantment and environmental crises in the Anthropocene, this paper explores engagement with nature as a spiritual experience and resource through ‘Celtic’ Christian prayer walks in the Isle of Man. Web-based and printed materials for the [...] Read more.
Centring on embodiment, gendered eco-spiritual responses to nature, enchantment and environmental crises in the Anthropocene, this paper explores engagement with nature as a spiritual experience and resource through ‘Celtic’ Christian prayer walks in the Isle of Man. Web-based and printed materials for the walks are analysed for references to nature and environmental responsibility, and the complexities of personal, gendered and theological relation to nature and the environment are explored through participants’ accounts. The analysis is attentive to participants professing Christian faith and institutional affiliation as well as those without affiliation or faith, and to their gendered experience. Themes identified include nature-inspired ‘Celtic’ spirituality; personal relation to the non-human (the divine, nature and nature-as-divine); the landscape as a liminal ‘thin place’; and social and environmental responsibility. The paper concludes by signalling the potential for bridging between pilgrimage-centred enchantment and eco-spirituality in order to mobilise engagement with and for the environment in the Anthropocene, including environmental conservation activities, lobbying or protest. Whilst eschewing gendered stereotypes, empirical findings evidence gendered patterns of engagement and responses to different expressions of spirituality. Attention to these differences could facilitate the engaging and mobilising of different cohorts of pilgrims with environmental agendas, inspiring personal and collective environmental action. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Gender, Nature and Religious Re-enchantment in the Anthropocene)
Show Figures

Figure 1

Back to TopTop