Vibrant Sacralities and Nonhuman Animacies: The Matter of New Materialism and Material Religion

Authors

  • George Ioannides University of Sydney

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1558/jasr.v26i3.234

Keywords:

Material, Religion, Nonhuman, Materiality, New Materialism, Animism

Abstract

This article addresses the complex and contentious associations between the study of religion, materialism, and nonhuman materialities. Acknowledging the revaluation of religious material culture, and the recon?guration of the relations between religion and materialism, it is argued that the utility of such theoretical and methodological manoeuvres would be better served by thinking through the work of the ‘new materialisms’, which engage the question of matter and the material through posthumanist and anti-anthro-pocentric positionalities that are at times absent from the study of material religion. In so doing, this article analyses the potentialities and limitations of the religious materialism of Manuel Vásquez, placing it alongside the theory of new materialism and the representative work of Jane Bennett. Such interventions are then thought with and through a recon?gured sense of ‘animism,’ both as a means with which to differently ontologise nonhuman material agency, and to posit an approach to these topics that might be labelled a ‘new materialist religious animacy’. Ultimately, it is averred that such a theoretically entangled exploration of the above ?elds and concepts is important for the examination of religious phenomena alongside the self-generativity and recalcitrance of (religious) materiality, both human and nonhuman in kind.

Author Biography

  • George Ioannides, University of Sydney
    George Ioannides is a PhD Candidate, tutor, casual lecturer, and research assistant in the Department of Studies in Religion at the University of Sydney. His doctoral research aims to rethink the points of correlation between the academic study of religion and that of materiality, new materialism, and the nonhuman, by placing itself at the broad nexus of religious studies, continental philosophy, and human-animal studies. He is currently interested in thinking through how particular theories of matter and mattering might animate certain conceptualisations of religiosity, including that of material religion, trans-species religion, and the materiality of religious ‘things.’ As well as publishing on the subjects of animals in film, religio-sexual aesthetics in film, and the intersections of the study of Islam and queer theory, George was also guest co-editor of an issue of Literature and Aesthetics on ‘the limits of representation and the aesthetics of excess’. His broader research interests include the study of religion and material and visual culture, human-animal studies and ecocriticism, cultural studies and Continental philosophy, and the intersections surrounding religion, gender, and sexuality.

Published

2014-02-24

How to Cite

Ioannides, G. (2014). Vibrant Sacralities and Nonhuman Animacies: The Matter of New Materialism and Material Religion. Journal for the Academic Study of Religion, 26(3), 234-253. https://doi.org/10.1558/jasr.v26i3.234