The plant in between: Analogism and entanglement in an Italian community of anthroposophists

The article analyses the special relationship with the world of plants developed by anthroposophy from the framework of a new perspective called the “plant turn” (Myers 2015). Anthroposophy (AS) is analysed as a peculiar form of Analogism (Descola 2005), historically derived from the philosophy of R...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Nadia Breda
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Università degli Studi di Cagliari 2017-01-01
Series:Anuac
Online Access:https://ojs.unica.it/index.php/anuac/article/view/2530
id doaj-b711b1b21ea04b00829efa79350f9af6
record_format Article
spelling doaj-b711b1b21ea04b00829efa79350f9af62021-03-12T13:01:56ZengUniversità degli Studi di CagliariAnuac2239-625X2017-01-015210.7340/anuac2239-625X-25301711The plant in between: Analogism and entanglement in an Italian community of anthroposophistsNadia Breda0Università di Firenze, ItalyThe article analyses the special relationship with the world of plants developed by anthroposophy from the framework of a new perspective called the “plant turn” (Myers 2015). Anthroposophy (AS) is analysed as a peculiar form of Analogism (Descola 2005), historically derived from the philosophy of Rudolf Steiner and subsequently evolved into contemporary AS practices that the author encountered during her fieldwork in a community of North-Eastern Italy. Both Steiner’s texts and the analysis of contemporary practices of AS reveal a relationship with the world of plants that the author reads in light of Ingold’s categories of “interweaving” of the world, the interpenetration of elements, and their ceaseless becoming (Ingold 2011). The result is a representation of the vegetal world involving the whole cosmos, humans and non-humans, terrestrial and celestial, in a cosmic expansion of the relations between beings typical of Analogisms. The practices referring to the vegetal world enacted by anthroposophists are intense, engaging, dialogue-based and provocative in their ability to uproot many elements of naturalism and deal with a contemporary world characterised by ecological crisis.   https://ojs.unica.it/index.php/anuac/article/view/2530
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Nadia Breda
spellingShingle Nadia Breda
The plant in between: Analogism and entanglement in an Italian community of anthroposophists
Anuac
author_facet Nadia Breda
author_sort Nadia Breda
title The plant in between: Analogism and entanglement in an Italian community of anthroposophists
title_short The plant in between: Analogism and entanglement in an Italian community of anthroposophists
title_full The plant in between: Analogism and entanglement in an Italian community of anthroposophists
title_fullStr The plant in between: Analogism and entanglement in an Italian community of anthroposophists
title_full_unstemmed The plant in between: Analogism and entanglement in an Italian community of anthroposophists
title_sort plant in between: analogism and entanglement in an italian community of anthroposophists
publisher Università degli Studi di Cagliari
series Anuac
issn 2239-625X
publishDate 2017-01-01
description The article analyses the special relationship with the world of plants developed by anthroposophy from the framework of a new perspective called the “plant turn” (Myers 2015). Anthroposophy (AS) is analysed as a peculiar form of Analogism (Descola 2005), historically derived from the philosophy of Rudolf Steiner and subsequently evolved into contemporary AS practices that the author encountered during her fieldwork in a community of North-Eastern Italy. Both Steiner’s texts and the analysis of contemporary practices of AS reveal a relationship with the world of plants that the author reads in light of Ingold’s categories of “interweaving” of the world, the interpenetration of elements, and their ceaseless becoming (Ingold 2011). The result is a representation of the vegetal world involving the whole cosmos, humans and non-humans, terrestrial and celestial, in a cosmic expansion of the relations between beings typical of Analogisms. The practices referring to the vegetal world enacted by anthroposophists are intense, engaging, dialogue-based and provocative in their ability to uproot many elements of naturalism and deal with a contemporary world characterised by ecological crisis.  
url https://ojs.unica.it/index.php/anuac/article/view/2530
work_keys_str_mv AT nadiabreda theplantinbetweenanalogismandentanglementinanitaliancommunityofanthroposophists
AT nadiabreda plantinbetweenanalogismandentanglementinanitaliancommunityofanthroposophists
_version_ 1724222974849974272