Deep blue religion

Through ethnographic/narrative interviews with sea stewards (marine ecologists, surfers, divers, activists etc.), this paper reviews the findings of research on the significance of an ‘aquatic nature religion’ in the lives of these sea-connected individuals. ‘Deep blue’ examines their relationship w...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Shaw, Sylvie
Format: Conference Object
Language:English
Published: Australian Association for the Study of Religion 2006
Subjects:
Online Access:https://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:196679
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spelling ftunivqespace:oai:espace.library.uq.edu.au:UQ:196679 2023-05-15T18:25:38+02:00 Deep blue religion Shaw, Sylvie 2006-01-01 https://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:196679 eng eng Australian Association for the Study of Religion Aquatic nature religion Sea-connected individuals Relationships - marine environment Physical connections Emotional connections Intellectual connections Spiritual connections 22 Philosophy and Religious Studies 2203 Philosophy 2299 Other Philosophy and Religious Studies Conference Paper 2006 ftunivqespace 2020-12-22T05:33:33Z Through ethnographic/narrative interviews with sea stewards (marine ecologists, surfers, divers, activists etc.), this paper reviews the findings of research on the significance of an ‘aquatic nature religion’ in the lives of these sea-connected individuals. ‘Deep blue’ examines their relationship with the marine environment on a physical, emotional, intellectual and spiritual plane, and as the sea stewards dive into the watery depths, dance with waves, or try to stop illegal whaling in the southern ocean, they are confronted with the ocean’s power and their own mortality, as well as to the extent of ecological devastation. What drives them to protect the sea and what sustains them in their quest? The ocean is ‘alien space’ for humans, but sea stewards feel at home here. To explore their feelings, the paper uses Bourdieu’s notion of social capital, and proposes an ‘ecosocial capital’, reflecting the rich links between human health and wellbeing and environmental health and wellbeing and sustainability. There is surprisingly little research on blue connections, indicating perhaps the ‘ordinariness’ of watery connections as places to walk the dog or have magical holidays, but with tales of diving into kelp forests, restoring sea meadows beneath the surface, swimming with whales and skimming on waves, the sea stewards help shift the emphasis on green, to blue and green - through their stories with place, spirituality, activism and wellbeing. Conference Object Southern Ocean The University of Queensland: UQ eSpace Southern Ocean
institution Open Polar
collection The University of Queensland: UQ eSpace
op_collection_id ftunivqespace
language English
topic Aquatic nature religion
Sea-connected individuals
Relationships - marine environment
Physical connections
Emotional connections
Intellectual connections
Spiritual connections
22 Philosophy and Religious Studies
2203 Philosophy
2299 Other Philosophy and Religious Studies
spellingShingle Aquatic nature religion
Sea-connected individuals
Relationships - marine environment
Physical connections
Emotional connections
Intellectual connections
Spiritual connections
22 Philosophy and Religious Studies
2203 Philosophy
2299 Other Philosophy and Religious Studies
Shaw, Sylvie
Deep blue religion
topic_facet Aquatic nature religion
Sea-connected individuals
Relationships - marine environment
Physical connections
Emotional connections
Intellectual connections
Spiritual connections
22 Philosophy and Religious Studies
2203 Philosophy
2299 Other Philosophy and Religious Studies
description Through ethnographic/narrative interviews with sea stewards (marine ecologists, surfers, divers, activists etc.), this paper reviews the findings of research on the significance of an ‘aquatic nature religion’ in the lives of these sea-connected individuals. ‘Deep blue’ examines their relationship with the marine environment on a physical, emotional, intellectual and spiritual plane, and as the sea stewards dive into the watery depths, dance with waves, or try to stop illegal whaling in the southern ocean, they are confronted with the ocean’s power and their own mortality, as well as to the extent of ecological devastation. What drives them to protect the sea and what sustains them in their quest? The ocean is ‘alien space’ for humans, but sea stewards feel at home here. To explore their feelings, the paper uses Bourdieu’s notion of social capital, and proposes an ‘ecosocial capital’, reflecting the rich links between human health and wellbeing and environmental health and wellbeing and sustainability. There is surprisingly little research on blue connections, indicating perhaps the ‘ordinariness’ of watery connections as places to walk the dog or have magical holidays, but with tales of diving into kelp forests, restoring sea meadows beneath the surface, swimming with whales and skimming on waves, the sea stewards help shift the emphasis on green, to blue and green - through their stories with place, spirituality, activism and wellbeing.
format Conference Object
author Shaw, Sylvie
author_facet Shaw, Sylvie
author_sort Shaw, Sylvie
title Deep blue religion
title_short Deep blue religion
title_full Deep blue religion
title_fullStr Deep blue religion
title_full_unstemmed Deep blue religion
title_sort deep blue religion
publisher Australian Association for the Study of Religion
publishDate 2006
url https://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:196679
geographic Southern Ocean
geographic_facet Southern Ocean
genre Southern Ocean
genre_facet Southern Ocean
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