Agenda

07 Mar 2024 08:45

Eco-cosmology: A new paradigm for reevaluating indigenous knowledge and indigenous [...]

Sala Giovanni Morelli, Malcanton Marcorà

Eco-cosmology: A new paradigm for reevaluating indigenous knowledge and indigenous concepts on sustainability?

Dr. hab Lidia Guzy, University College Cork

Prof. Stefano Beggiora will Introduce the event with the special participation of Tara Douglas.

Abstract: In this talk I will present the concept of Eco-cosmology as indigenous knowledge system on sustainability (Guzy 2021 a/b). I understand eco-cosmologies as worldviews and life-worlds intrinsically relating the human with the non-human, the cosmos and the other-than-human sphere such as trees, animals, rivers, mountains and responding with indigenous knowledge and experience to non-human and other than human challenges and crises to existence (see Guzy and Kapalo 2017), often associated with shamanic worldviews, indigenous hermeneutics (see Gomez 2021) and indigenous aesthetics.

References: Gomez, Carlos Miguel. 2021. Palabra de Remedio y Otras Historias de Yagé. Bogotá: Los Conjurados.
Guzy, Lidia. 2021a. “The Dream as a Metaphor of Transformative Change.” In Metaphor, Sustainability, Transformation: Transdisciplinary Perspectives, edited by Colin Sage, Ian Hughes, Ed Byrnes, and Ger Mullaly, 196–210. London: Routledge.
Guzy, Lidia. 2021b. “Indigenous Shamanic Worldviews as Dialogical Eco-Cosmology.”  Lagoonscapes. The Venice Journal of Environmental Humanities, 1 (2): 281–94.
Guzy, Lidia, and James Kapalo, eds. 2017. Marginalised and Endangered Worldviews –Comparative Studies on Contemporary Eurasia, India and South America. Berlin: Lit Verlag.

Bio notes:

Dr. Lidia Guzy is an internationally trained social anthropologist, scholar of religions, currently Head of the Study of Religions Department and Lecturer in Contemporary South Asian Religions.  She is Director of the Marginalised and Endangered Worldviews Study Centre (MEWSC) and a global educator working in the areas of culture, globalisation, indigeneity, art, representation, religion and society, marginalised and endangered worldviews and societies. 

Tara Douglas is a co-founder and the Secretary of the Adivasi Arts Trust. She achieved BA Hons in Animation at West Surrey College of Art and Design (UK), and a Professional Doctorate in Digital Media at Bournemouth University (UK) for the practice-led Tales of the Tribes: Animation as a Tool for Indigenous Representation. Her documentary film The Journey of the Tales of the Tribes (2018) was broadcast nationwide in India. Tara is the Pl for Documentation of traditional architecture in the Wancho villages in Arunachal Pradesh supported by Endangered Wooden Architecture Programme at Oxford Brookes University.

Organized by

Department of Asian and North African Studies (Stefano Beggiora)

Downloads

Poster 1810 KB

Search in the agenda