Naxi Cosmology of Mt Yulong Sacred Sites with Caveats for Conservation

Mt Yulong is central to Naxi people of Southwest China. Through participatory mapping, free listing, and extended semi-structured interviews, we explored relations of Naxi cosmologies of sacred space with “biodiversity conservation”. For this commonly espoused partnership, we found encouragement, sk...

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Main Authors: Jan Salick, Robbie Hart, Li Siyu
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Laboratoire Éco-anthropologie et Ethnobiologie 2022-06-01
Series:Revue d'ethnoécologie
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/ethnoecologie/8929
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author Jan Salick
Robbie Hart
Li Siyu
author_facet Jan Salick
Robbie Hart
Li Siyu
author_sort Jan Salick
collection DOAJ
description Mt Yulong is central to Naxi people of Southwest China. Through participatory mapping, free listing, and extended semi-structured interviews, we explored relations of Naxi cosmologies of sacred space with “biodiversity conservation”. For this commonly espoused partnership, we found encouragement, skepticism and challenges. Naxi perspectives on sacred space and conservation ranged in scale from hyper-local, through regional, to historical and cosmological. Some participants worried about conjoining religion with government conservation initiatives. Others argued conceptually that “conservation” prioritizes people while traditional Naxi cosmology stresses equality and brotherhood between people and nature. Challenges for conservation would be to integrate this cosmological view as well as origin myths, Naxi traditions of suicide, and Sanduo, the god of Mt Yulong, who “shines like lightning [and his] mouth spits fire” – not a deity to be engaged without care. Naxi stressed primacy of culture and cosmology. These cosmological issues raised in a local context are of far greater magnitude than one culture and one mountain and may suggest paths to effective conservation of sacred natural spaces around the world.
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spelling doaj.art-2d885fdab587441da696d39d4824402b2022-12-22T04:02:46ZengLaboratoire Éco-anthropologie et EthnobiologieRevue d'ethnoécologie2267-24192022-06-0121Naxi Cosmology of Mt Yulong Sacred Sites with Caveats for ConservationJan SalickRobbie HartLi SiyuMt Yulong is central to Naxi people of Southwest China. Through participatory mapping, free listing, and extended semi-structured interviews, we explored relations of Naxi cosmologies of sacred space with “biodiversity conservation”. For this commonly espoused partnership, we found encouragement, skepticism and challenges. Naxi perspectives on sacred space and conservation ranged in scale from hyper-local, through regional, to historical and cosmological. Some participants worried about conjoining religion with government conservation initiatives. Others argued conceptually that “conservation” prioritizes people while traditional Naxi cosmology stresses equality and brotherhood between people and nature. Challenges for conservation would be to integrate this cosmological view as well as origin myths, Naxi traditions of suicide, and Sanduo, the god of Mt Yulong, who “shines like lightning [and his] mouth spits fire” – not a deity to be engaged without care. Naxi stressed primacy of culture and cosmology. These cosmological issues raised in a local context are of far greater magnitude than one culture and one mountain and may suggest paths to effective conservation of sacred natural spaces around the world.http://journals.openedition.org/ethnoecologie/8929Naxi cosmologysacred spaceDongbaHimalayabiocultural conservationritual suicide
spellingShingle Jan Salick
Robbie Hart
Li Siyu
Naxi Cosmology of Mt Yulong Sacred Sites with Caveats for Conservation
Revue d'ethnoécologie
Naxi cosmology
sacred space
Dongba
Himalaya
biocultural conservation
ritual suicide
title Naxi Cosmology of Mt Yulong Sacred Sites with Caveats for Conservation
title_full Naxi Cosmology of Mt Yulong Sacred Sites with Caveats for Conservation
title_fullStr Naxi Cosmology of Mt Yulong Sacred Sites with Caveats for Conservation
title_full_unstemmed Naxi Cosmology of Mt Yulong Sacred Sites with Caveats for Conservation
title_short Naxi Cosmology of Mt Yulong Sacred Sites with Caveats for Conservation
title_sort naxi cosmology of mt yulong sacred sites with caveats for conservation
topic Naxi cosmology
sacred space
Dongba
Himalaya
biocultural conservation
ritual suicide
url http://journals.openedition.org/ethnoecologie/8929
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