RT Article T1 Of Cosmological Visions and Creativity: Shaping Animism, Indigenous Science, and Forestry in Southwest China JF Religions VO 14 IS 4 A1 Swancutt, Katherine LA English PB MDPI YR 2023 UL https://ixtheo.de/Record/1840221933 AB How do cosmological visions unsettle animistic and scientific ways of approaching the world? Whereas ‘cosmovisions’ have the narrow meaning of ‘worldviews’, people unleash new ‘cosmological visions’ through the creative act of relating to—and simultaneously dismantling—their constructs of the world at large. Drawing on my ethnography of the Nuosu, a Tibeto-Burman group of Southwest China, I show how an ethnohistorian and a priest set out, at the request of a local official, to address deforestation with a cosmological vision built upon animistic, indigenous scientific, social scientific, and natural scientific sensibilities. Holding sacrifices to land spirits across the Liangshan mountains of Yunnan province in the mid-2000s, they urged Nuosu to refrain from cutting down trees. Many Nuosu in the lumber trade responded with a counter vision that showed respect for land spirits but an unprecedented detachment from the world in animistic-cum-scientific terms. Cosmological visions like these proliferate among Nuosu, encouraging them to experiment with everything from testing the patience of land spirits to undercutting the science behind China’s forest protection policies. Here, creativity opens up new ways of envisioning indigenous autonomy and what it means to be alive to the world as an animist, a scientist, or both. K1 Southwest China K1 Relations K1 Natural Science K1 indigenous science K1 indigenous autonomy K1 Forestry K1 Detachment K1 Creativity K1 cosmological vision K1 Animism DO 10.3390/rel14040449