The Supreme Sukundimi Declaration–Sacred Water, Moral Ecologies and Ontological Politics in a Mining Encounter in Papua New Guinea

Falck, Christiane (2023) The Supreme Sukundimi Declaration–Sacred Water, Moral Ecologies and Ontological Politics in a Mining Encounter in Papua New Guinea. Anthropological Forum, 33 (1).

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Abstract

I discuss the Supreme Sukundimi Declaration, published as part of a campaign against the Frieda River Copper-Gold Project, in relation to the cosmo-ontological politics of individual and collective actors in a mining encounter in Papua New Guinea. I analyse the mobilisation of the Sepik River as a sacred being and a political actor from a perspective informed by findings from long-term fieldwork with Nyaura communities. In my analysis, I draw on theories from the New Animism that I combine with a political ontology perspective to grasp the political significance of the Sepik River’s connectedness with human and non-human entities in a regional and national context in which spirits are an important part of reality. I suggest that the fight of Sepik people, who align themselves with ancestral forces against the mining project and their national government, can be understood as a fight between different ontologies or ways of being-in-the-world.

Item ID: 78499
Item Type: Article (Research - C1)
ISSN: 1469-2902
Keywords: Christianity, Mining, new animism, personhood, political ontology
Copyright Information: © 2023 The University of Western Australia
Date Deposited: 19 Oct 2023 03:43
FoR Codes: 44 HUMAN SOCIETY > 4401 Anthropology > 440107 Social and cultural anthropology @ 100%
SEO Codes: 28 EXPANDING KNOWLEDGE > 2801 Expanding knowledge > 280116 Expanding knowledge in language, communication and culture @ 100%
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