Western Himalayan Nāgs as Guardians of Water Resources
Issue: Vol 11 No. 3 (2017)
Journal: Journal for the Study of Religion, Nature and Culture
Subject Areas: Religious Studies
DOI: 10.1558/jsrnc.33600
Abstract:
My ethnographic research focuses on the Nāgs, which are cobra-shaped deities and guardians of water sources, to exemplify how religion and ecology relate to each other in the Indian Western Himalayas.
Ethnography has much to contribute to environmental research: Hydrological degradation of the Ganges (alias mother Gangā), erosion of mountains (alias goddess Nandā or the Nāg deity Vāsuki), and deforestation are not merely physical phenomena. They also belong to the ritually and mythically constructed environments of Hindus, in which religion, ownership, irrigation techniques and microeconomics are interconnected.
My project examines not only how theories and mythologies about water, rain and the Nāgs shape the imaginative world of deities and place them in ‘nature’, but also how this nature is reciprocally set up and conceptualized by its connection to deities. How do people distribute their water supply and what role do the Nāgs play in this instance?
Author: Gerrit Lange
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