Seeing the tundra for the plants, on the eco-spiritual wholeness of arctic vegetation

0601 history and archaeology 06 humanities and the arts 15. Life on land
DOI: 10.1177/00377686211043693 Publication Date: 2021-10-13T01:30:47Z
ABSTRACT
Drawing on ethnographic field research in Chukotka, Russia, this article explores ideas and practices connected with the Arctic tundra vegetation that speak to its place in Chukchi spirituality and cultural milieu. The ethnographic focus is on a Chukchi remembrance ceremony with other social contexts of human–plant interaction offered as comparative examples. Contributing novel insight for the considerations of sentient landscapes and ceremonial engagements with plants, the article turns to the Chukchi eco-spiritual relationships in the beyond-the-human world. It suggests that the vegetation cover is not merely an assemblage of fungi and plants, but an organismal membrane through which the tundra communicates and acts, while also facilitating integrations between the human and beyond-the-human worlds.
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